Oct 082024
 

The following guest post from editor and journalist Maria Bustillos is part of our Vanishing Culture series, highlighting the power and importance of preservation in our digital age. On August 13, 1961, the Sunday edition of The Honolulu Advertiser published its official Health Bureau Statistics (“Births, Marriages, Deaths”); on page B-6, in the leftmost column—just below the ads for luau supplies and Carnation Evaporated Milk—the twenty-second of twenty-five birth notices announced that on August 4, Mrs. Barack H. Obama of 6085 Kalanianaole Highway had given birth to a son. The Honolulu State Library subsequently copied that page, along with the rest of the newspaper, onto microfilm, as a routine addition to its archive. Decades later, as Donald Trump…

External feed Read More at the Source: https://blog.archive.org/2024/10/08/vanishing-culture-keeping-the-receipts/

 2024-10-08  No Responses »
Oct 082024
 

The recent WordPress
controversy
is not the first time there’s been tension between the
WordPress community, the interests of Automattic as a business, and Matt
Mullenweg’s leadership as WordPress’s benevolent dictator for
life (BDFL). In particular, Mullenweg’s focus on pushing WordPress to use a new “editing experience” called Gutenberg caused significant
friction—and led to the ClassicPress fork. Users who
want to preserve the “classic” WordPress experience without straying
too far from the WordPress fold may want to look into ClassicPress.

External feed Read More at the Source: https://lwn.net/Articles/992219/

 2024-10-08  No Responses »