Dave's WordPress home in the Fediverse :-)
Monday, April 20, 2026

I applied to speak at WebCamp Europe but didn’t make the cut. I did see that Jonathan Desrosiers is giving a talk about the web, and his pitch is right on. Please go listen to him if you’re in Kraków in June. I have been developing software around the ideas of building the web, software that runs on top of WordPress, which imho should be playing a much bigger role in the web. I have a track record here of actually founding new tech ecosystems, but as time goes by people forget how this stuff is made, I think. I’ll probably try again with WordCamp US and of course Canada again, I had such a good time there last year. #

How do you subscribe to a feed in Feedly? Had to ask Google. Click on Follow Sources in the sidebar. It never occurred to me that Subscribe would become Follow. The screen that comes up when you click doesn’t offer a clue of how to subscribe to the URL I have on the clipboard. I did enter the URL of the site’s feed but that didn’t work, and it brought up a screen where they want money. I think I understand what happened here. #

I asked ChatGPT if the term glass palace had been used to talk about pre-PC computer data centers. Yes. #

I’m creating new software in ways I never would have conceived of last year. I see solutions to one of the most significant code management problems we used to have, our inability to remember how our code works, unless the app is very small and they never seem to be. This is why you don’t see much inspiration in app updates after a couple of years. Everyone has moved on and no one who remains can figure out how it works. But that has changed now, bigtime.

The next product I develop should be able to continue to evolve much more easily thanks to Claude Code.

“Hey Claude, people want this feature to be optional (or configurable). Here’s how that should work.”

In a human-based development organization, even if you ran the show, you might wait a very long time and it might never come. With Claude, I can have the new functionality before I know what to do with it.

I called my second company UserLand. The idea was that we’d develop software for users, always be thinking of them, and listening and give them more and more power to shape the way their computers worked. It was what I felt was missing from software in the 80s, a focus on the users creating their own future. So back then we designed the software for them. We were hoping they’d get to implement it too.

Now we’re going to try again. 😄

Last update: 4/20/26; 9:24:04 AM.