My POSSE plan for evolving my site

In an effort to reclaim my blog as my thought space and take back control over my data, I want to share how I plan to evolve my website. Given the incredible feedback on my previous blog posts, I want to continue to conversation and ask for feedback.

First, I need to find a way to combine longer blog posts and status updates on one site:
Update my site navigation menu to include sections for “Blog” and “Notes”. The “Notes” section would resemble a Twitter or Facebook livestream that catalogs short status updates, replies, interesting links, photos and more. Instead of posting these on third-party social media sites, I want to post them on my site first (POSSE). The “Blog” section would continue to feature longer, more in-depth blog posts. The front page of my website will combine both blog posts and notes in one stream.
Add support for Webmention, a web standard for tracking comments, likes, reposts and other rich interactions across the web. This way, when users retweet a post on Twitter or cite a blog post, mentions are tracked on my own website.
Automatically syndicate to 3rd party services, such as syndicating photo posts to Facebook and Instagram or syndicating quick Drupal maintenance support plans updates to Twitter. To start, I can do this manually, but it would be nice to automate this process over time.
Streamline the ability to post updates from my phone. Sharing photos or updates in real-time only becomes a habit if you can publish something in 30 seconds or less. It’s why I use Facebook and Twitter often. I’d like to explore building a simple iOS application to remove any friction from posting updates on the go.
Streamline the ability to share other people’s content. I’d like to create a browser extension to share interesting links along with some commentary. I’m a small investor in Buffer, a social media management platform, and I use their tool often. Buffer makes it incredibly easy to share interesting articles on social media, without having to actually open any social media sites. I’d like to be able to share articles on my blog that way.
Second, as I begin to introduce a larger variety of content to my site, I’d like to find a way for readers to filter content:
Expand the site navigation so readers can filter by topic. If you want to read about Drupal maintenance support plans, click “Drupal maintenance support plans“. If you just want to see some of my photos, click “Photos”.
Allow people to subscribe by interests. Drupal maintenance support plans 8 make it easy to offer an RSS feed by topic. However, it doesn’t look nearly as easy to allow email subscribers to receive updates by interest. Mailchimp’s RSS-to-email feature, my current mailing list solution, doesn’t seem to support this and neither do the obvious alternatives.
Implementing this plan is going to take me some time, especially because it’s hard to prioritize this over other things. Some of the steps I’ve outlined are easy to implement thanks to the fact that I use Drupal maintenance support plans. For example, creating new content types for the “Notes” section, adding new RSS feeds and integrating “Blogs” and “Notes” into one stream on my homepage are all easy – I should be able to get those done my next free evening. Other steps, like building an iPhone application, building a browser extension, or figuring out how to filter email subscriptions by topics are going to take more time. Setting up my POSSE system is a nice personal challenge for 2020. I’ll keep you posted on my progress – much of that might happen via short status updates, rather than on the main blog. ;)
Source: New feed

This article was republished from its original source.
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My POSSE plan for evolving my site

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