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All items from July 2023

23 Jul 2023 : Public Service Unbroadcasting #
Benefits come from the strangest of places. When the BBC withdrew its open radio streaming services at the start of the month I felt pretty frustrated. All the indicators suggested this was a great move for the BBC, not so great for listeners like me. Withdrawing MP3 streams means users have been forced to move to the BBC Sounds app or website if they want to listen to live radio online. The BBC gets one fewer service to maintain, plus the ability to better track listening habits, advertise podcasts and other means of user manipulation.
 
BBC Sounds Android app, website and the Sailfish OS Received app

This is an especially big hit for me, because when it comes to Sailfish OS — the smartphone operating system I use in preference to iOS or Android for reasons of privacy and control — there is no official native BBC Sounds app. I can run it using App Support, but what I really want is to listen to the radio through one of my preferred, native, open source apps (such as Received). I've been happily doing so for a decade, and while I accept the BBC is entitled to make its content available (or not) in whatever way it wants, it's frustrating to have a perfectly good option taken away.

So where's the upside? It's counterintuitive, but not listening to the radio turns out to be a really good thing. Since dropping the service my mornings have become an oasis of calm. They're no longer filled with politicians, pundits and presenters verbally sparing with one another. I don't have to suffer the banality of the sports coverage (made worse by the lack of any actual live sports in the mornings). The treacly vacuity of Thought for the Day is blissfully absent from my life.

It was during the pandemic that my obsession with the radio really embedded. Like everyone else I was desperate to know whether we were going to survive the next 24 hours. Stuck in a small apartment on my own it became an important proxy for real human interaction.

Happily that time is over, both the pandemic and the obsessive listening. I now sit quietly, listening to the birds sing, the leaves rustling in the breeze, the occasional propeller plane humming overhead. It's soothing. My anxiety is reduced. And I'm now certain this BBC-enforced calm is a positive change after all.

Having said all this, I've not stopped listening to BBC Radio completely: hapilly all BBC radio content is still available using my own GetiPlay app. This doesn't support live streaming though, so it means I have to actively choose to listen, rather than blithely surrounding myself with whatever happens to be on.
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16 Jul 2023 : Freedom Road #
It's time for me to leave Twitter. There's been plenty written about the recent — and not so recent — changes at Twitter. I have my own reasons for wanting to leave, which I'll write more about in a second. But the long and short of it is that Twitter is no longer part of the open Web. You now have to be logged-in to view content and that's completely antithetical to my approach to the Web,

Twitter has always felt anomalous to me. I created an account back in 2007 on the advice of my brother in law, who foresaw the great potential of the Twitter API. When I look at Twitter's trajectory since then, I'm reminded of how prescient that was.
 
My (soon-to-be or already deactivated) Twitter profile

Since then I've tried to make the most of Twitter and its API. I wrote my firt bot in July 2007 called GoldTwit which periodically posted gold prices (also suggested to me by my brother in law). Back then Twitter had fist-class SMS integration, meaning you could achieve what you'd now use push notifications for, without having to worry about gateways or costs.

Then I wrote an app called Twitterpost that periodically checked my email server for new mail, posting the sender and subject line to Twitter. You can see some of the code for it on the left hand side of the screenshot below. It's so long ago that I don't properly recall why I needed it, but from my Twitter feed I can see it ran between September and April 2008.

I went on to create a bot for controlling my RISC OS machine using the site. I could post commands to my Twitter feed, which my machine would automatically pick up and act on (reply with a status update; run an application; execute a star command). That was probably my most interesting utilisation. Some of the code for this is shown on the right hand side of the screenshot.

Then for I while I had details of every Subversion and Git project commit logged to my Twitter feed. I thought it would make my profile more interesting, but it almost certainly had the reverse effect.

More recently I developed a Twitter Quine written in Python: run the quine and it will post a copy of its own code to your Twitter feed.

Somewhat weirdly I can still view the workings of these going back sixteen years (from quines, to appointments, to gold) on my private development Twitter feed.
 
RISC OS Twitter API code examples

After all this, I still never really got Twitter for actual social networking purposes. Tweets are too short to say anything meaningful; my home timeline flows too fast to focus on any particular topic; the threading design makes following conversations painful.

I do understand why it's useful for some; especially companies, journalists and politicians. This was brought home to me listening to a politician on the Westminster Hour. Sadly too long ago for me to remember who or to be able to find it in the archives, but she explained that it had been revolutionary in allowing for the first time ever for her to have public conversations with her constituents. This makes sense to me: if you want to have 'one-to-many' conversations, where you're controlling the narrative, broadcasting to many people, receiving a general sentiment back, then Twitter looks like the perfect tool. I'd question whether it's a valid conversation, but I can understand why that's attractive for some. Definitely not me though.

Despite this, for many years it's been the only social network I've been able to stomach. I pretended to myself that, since all my tweets are public, that made it less privacy-violating, more open, and less susceptible to subversive tracking, than other social networks like Facebook, Instagram or Google Plus. I liked the fact my timeline was deterministic: just tweets and retweets from people I explicitly follow. Finally, Twitter was the only 'first-class' social network for Sailfish OS, the only one with operating system level integration.

If you've been following recent Twitter developments you'll know that, apart from this very last point, almost all of this has now changed. The Twitter API has been debilitated through throttling and pay-walling. Tweets can only be viewed by users who are logged in. My timeline has been wrested from me by an algorithm; it's now full of tweets from people I don't recognise saying things that don't interest me. Access using my preferred Sailfish OS Twitter client has been blocked.

As a centralised, closed-source, for-profit resource, this was always somewhat inevitable. It feels like it's taken a surprisingly long time to reach this point. But it has.

To be clear, not all of the recent changes have been bad. I particularly applaud Twitter's apparent aim of shifting from advertising to a subscription-based funding model. I'm quite happy to pay for Web services; already do in other cases. I wish more of the Web would offer subscriptions as an alternative to tracking. But speaking frankly, Twitter just isn't valuable enough to me for this to be worth my while.

Plus, Mastodon fulfils all of my requirements, with none of the downsides: federated, open source, open API, controllable, deterministic, tracking-free.

So it's time to park up my rig and walk away.

I'll be sad to inevitably lose contact with people as a result of leaving Twitter. I don't have many followers and have even fewer on Mastodon. I sincerely hope anyone who cares enough to want to follow will join me there. Mastodon is doing a much better job at fulfilling the potential of the Web, and has a much better chance of sticking to it.
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13 Jul 2023 : A Year of Continuous Service #
Today I'm celebrating a year of continuous uptime for my home server, Constantia. This is, in my opinion, quite an achievement. I'm periodically reminded of how much of an achievement this is every time my work Macbook updates itself and insists on performing a reboot. This happens every couple of weeks and is very disruptive for my work. I regularly keep multiple screen sessions open, each with multiple shells, none of which are retained across a reboot (right now I have 19 open GNU screen shells).
 
Console showing uptime of 367 days
That means that on my mac I'm forced to recreate multiple running servers, open vim sessions and shell states every time there's an update.

In contrast Constantia runs a fully patched Linux install. The machine regularly updates itself with the latest security patches, with Livepatch ensuring the patches are applied without the need for a reboot. That's really quite impressive, when you think about it. What's more, Constantia doesn't live in a homeostatically cooled server room with back-up generators and a carefully-controlled environment. It just lives on a shelf underneath the Wifi router. If I'm honest I was pretty astonished to discover we'd not had a power cut in the last 12 months.
 
A small computer underneath a Wifi router

It's putting the work in too. The software it runs includes a NextCloud instance for cloud storage, calendar and contact sharing, a VPN endpoint, a Git server, an SVN server, a Jitsi video conferencing bridge (that got me through the pandemic), a file sharing server, an IRC bouncer, a backup server a Web server and a DNS cache.

Constantia started life in November 2007 — over 15 years ago — as a Koolu box, which I upgraded in 2013 to an Aleutia T1. Both small, low-power, fanless devices. The Aleutia has now been running continuously for over a decade. So let me give a quiet but emphatic cheer for my home server and the Linux that runs on it. I wish all computers could be as robust and unproblematic!
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