From 4a6699042ef08828d0804ff01be8ef2f8392eab0 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: mycognosist Date: Fri, 2 Jun 2023 10:52:22 +0200 Subject: [PATCH] correct spelling of Erick's name --- glyph.html | 2 +- 1 file changed, 1 insertion(+), 1 deletion(-) diff --git a/glyph.html b/glyph.html index 2856b2f..bd6822b 100644 --- a/glyph.html +++ b/glyph.html @@ -121,7 +121,7 @@ Like "Okay, we realize that this is an inherently difficult thing. You have node
max: For some reason, when I think of this topic, I sometimes feel exhausted, but I haven't fully analyzed why. But there's almost this feeling of I would love to help weave multiple networks together. And I know that sometimes I do, just through existing in the world and my interests, but it also reminds me of when I was younger and I used to feel like I wanted to read all the books in the world and sometimes I would freak myself out that that was never going to happen. And sometimes for some reason feel like the active maintenance of networks is also daunting to me.

-glyph: Yeah, it's a lot. It's a lot. And yeah, I guess it sort of comes and goes hey? So like there are times where maybe you are quite inspired by that and you have the capacity and energy and the timing is right and other times where it is daunting and a bit exhausting. I tend to think, the sort of thing I have in my mind, and I think it's something you've seen through your travels and your experiences. It's something certainly that Luandro has spoken about, and Eric as well, is the power of doing this kind of work in shared physical space. Like having a farm or a village or a place where people are doing this work on a continuous basis, even if it's just one or two people, and then there are of waves of other people who come to join in and practice and learn together. I really think that's gonna lead to a flourishing peer-to-peer future. Yeah, I mean, we're all trying to build local-first software and that can be most powerful when it's kind of homegrown and meeting local needs, right in the context.
+glyph: Yeah, it's a lot. It's a lot. And yeah, I guess it sort of comes and goes hey? So like there are times where maybe you are quite inspired by that and you have the capacity and energy and the timing is right and other times where it is daunting and a bit exhausting. I tend to think, the sort of thing I have in my mind, and I think it's something you've seen through your travels and your experiences. It's something certainly that Luandro has spoken about, and Erick as well, is the power of doing this kind of work in shared physical space. Like having a farm or a village or a place where people are doing this work on a continuous basis, even if it's just one or two people, and then there are of waves of other people who come to join in and practice and learn together. I really think that's gonna lead to a flourishing peer-to-peer future. Yeah, I mean, we're all trying to build local-first software and that can be most powerful when it's kind of homegrown and meeting local needs, right in the context.

max: Totally. And yeah, I guess I've also felt once you get this chance to meet and be in person, even for some short period of time, it then makes the network richer in its online form often too.