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1000 results for “mapache”
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Hear me out, if we can integrate these 4, in a seamless frictionless integrated experience for both, companies and users, we could have a nice alternative to #LinkedIn that is actually not crap.
Any interest?
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Hear me out, if we can integrate these 4, in a seamless frictionless integrated experience for both, companies and users, we could have a nice alternative to #LinkedIn that is actually not crap.
Any interest?
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Hear me out, if we can integrate these 4, in a seamless frictionless integrated experience for both, companies and users, we could have a nice alternative to #LinkedIn that is actually not crap.
Any interest?
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Hear me out, if we can integrate these 4, in a seamless frictionless integrated experience for both, companies and users, we could have a nice alternative to #LinkedIn that is actually not crap.
Any interest?
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@badgefed has a new blog design! Go check it out, including a new collaboration from @fajfer telling us his experience using #badgefed in the #ilovefs events
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@badgefed has a new blog design! Go check it out, including a new collaboration from @fajfer telling us his experience using #badgefed in the #ilovefs events
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@tazgetroete #Merz #sozial? Das passt doch überhaupt nicht zusammen! Also mal garnicht!
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@tazgetroete #Merz #sozial? Das passt doch überhaupt nicht zusammen! Also mal garnicht!
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@tazgetroete #Merz #sozial? Das passt doch überhaupt nicht zusammen! Also mal garnicht!
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@tazgetroete #Merz #sozial? Das passt doch überhaupt nicht zusammen! Also mal garnicht!
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@tazgetroete #Merz #sozial? Das passt doch überhaupt nicht zusammen! Also mal garnicht!
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Hallo #adobe
Wie kommt ihr auf die bescheuert Idee, die Hosts Datei auf meinem Rechner mit eurem Müll zu verändern??? -
Hallo #adobe
Wie kommt ihr auf die bescheuert Idee, die Hosts Datei auf meinem Rechner mit eurem Müll zu verändern??? -
Hallo #adobe
Wie kommt ihr auf die bescheuert Idee, die Hosts Datei auf meinem Rechner mit eurem Müll zu verändern??? -
I am also adding this to @badgefed badgefed to explain to people who are used to receive #badges and #OpenBadges by email , any suggestions?
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For the first time in over 10 years (with just a Covid break), I won’t got to #siggraph this year. I don't think this is the right time to travel to the U.S. And there will be many others who don't want to or can't travel there either. Unfortunately, #acm decided it was best to cancel the virtual tickets this year. So I guess it'll be a SIGGRAPH without me. I'm looking forward to the next SIGGRAPH in #Vancouver. Or anywhere else outside the U.S. #usa #trump #computergraphics #science
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ActivityPub is also used for federation.
Badge issuers (ActivityPub actors) can follow other issuers.
When a badge is issued, a Create activity is federated.
Other servers receive that activity and can store a local copy of the badge.
This works very similarly to how Mastodon servers cache posts.
Because of that, badges can also be:
• revoked using the Delete activity
• updated using the Update activityAgain, this reuses existing ActivityPub verbs instead of inventing a new protocol or new spec.
Simple primitives, (I love how simple it is), powerful results.
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Verification is also straightforward.
The #OpenBadge issuer URL points to the ActivityPub actor URL.
That means the same actor who published the badge also owns the public/private key pair used in ActivityPub.
So the actor identity and the badge issuer identity match.
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ActivityPub is also used for federation.
Badge issuers (ActivityPub actors) can follow other issuers.
When a badge is issued, a Create activity is federated.
Other servers receive that activity and can store a local copy of the badge.
This works very similarly to how Mastodon servers cache posts.
Because of that, badges can also be:
• revoked using the Delete activity
• updated using the Update activityAgain, this reuses existing ActivityPub verbs instead of inventing a new protocol or new spec.
Simple primitives, (I love how simple it is), powerful results.
--
Verification is also straightforward.
The #OpenBadge issuer URL points to the ActivityPub actor URL.
That means the same actor who published the badge also owns the public/private key pair used in ActivityPub.
So the actor identity and the badge issuer identity match.
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ActivityPub is also used for federation.
Badge issuers (ActivityPub actors) can follow other issuers.
When a badge is issued, a Create activity is federated.
Other servers receive that activity and can store a local copy of the badge.
This works very similarly to how Mastodon servers cache posts.
Because of that, badges can also be:
• revoked using the Delete activity
• updated using the Update activityAgain, this reuses existing ActivityPub verbs instead of inventing a new protocol or new spec.
Simple primitives, (I love how simple it is), powerful results.
--
Verification is also straightforward.
The #OpenBadge issuer URL points to the ActivityPub actor URL.
That means the same actor who published the badge also owns the public/private key pair used in ActivityPub.
So the actor identity and the badge issuer identity match.
-
ActivityPub is also used for federation.
Badge issuers (ActivityPub actors) can follow other issuers.
When a badge is issued, a Create activity is federated.
Other servers receive that activity and can store a local copy of the badge.
This works very similarly to how Mastodon servers cache posts.
Because of that, badges can also be:
• revoked using the Delete activity
• updated using the Update activityAgain, this reuses existing ActivityPub verbs instead of inventing a new protocol or new spec.
Simple primitives, (I love how simple it is), powerful results.
--
Verification is also straightforward.
The #OpenBadge issuer URL points to the ActivityPub actor URL.
That means the same actor who published the badge also owns the public/private key pair used in ActivityPub.
So the actor identity and the badge issuer identity match.
-
ActivityPub is also used for federation.
Badge issuers (ActivityPub actors) can follow other issuers.
When a badge is issued, a Create activity is federated.
Other servers receive that activity and can store a local copy of the badge.
This works very similarly to how Mastodon servers cache posts.
Because of that, badges can also be:
• revoked using the Delete activity
• updated using the Update activityAgain, this reuses existing ActivityPub verbs instead of inventing a new protocol or new spec.
Simple primitives, (I love how simple it is), powerful results.
--
Verification is also straightforward.
The #OpenBadge issuer URL points to the ActivityPub actor URL.
That means the same actor who published the badge also owns the public/private key pair used in ActivityPub.
So the actor identity and the badge issuer identity match.
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@badgefed is an open-source project that generates digital recognition in the form of #OpenBadges.
OpenBadges is a specification based on JSON. BadgeFed currently uses version 2 of the spec.
The main difference with v3 is verification.
In OpenBadges v3, the badge can be verified by itself because the verification information is embedded in the credential.
In OpenBadges v2, verification requires retrieving information from the issuer and badge endpoints.
For our use case, issuing recognition on the internet, this is not a problem.
In fact, we actually WANT that external verification step.
It allows badges to reference issuer endpoints and remain connected to the systems that created them.
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I am starting to upload all my "One Advice for a Younger Self from People that I admire" videos to my #peertube channel, in an effort to ditch tiktok/youtube for good.
follow my channel here @maho and check the videos here https://makertube.net/c/maho.pacheco/videos !
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It is that time of year when my @blog expires, so I'm taking the opportunity to give the site's style/CSS a quick makeover.
Do you like my new subscribe form, would you change something?