Last week, I wrote about wanting a Chrome extension for Highrise. This week, I built a first pass: https://github.com/nickgrossman/highrise-chrome-extension Here's a quick video demo of how it works:
Last week, I wrote about wanting a Chrome extension for Highrise. This week, I built a first pass: https://github.com/nickgrossman/highrise-chrome-extension Here's a quick video demo of how it works:
Last week, I wrote about wanting a Chrome extension for Highrise. This week, I built a first pass: https://github.com/nickgrossman/highrise-chrome-extension Here's a quick video demo of how it works:

For the past few weeks, I've been involved with a community effort to draft a declaration of freedom for the Internet. On Monday, it went live on the web, and is starting to get discussed. It's been an amazing, fascinating and inspiring year in the internet community. Today, the Verge has a nicely-produced writeup on the Declaration of Internet Freedom which also gets into the story of the last year of internet politics, including the SOPA/PIPA fight. I'm really looking forward to seeing how the Internet plays as an election issue this fall, and how we as a community can work to carry our energy and momentum into the next US congress and administration, as well as on the global front. For me personally, it's been an absolute thrill ride, as I've jumped with both feet into an area of policy, politics and advocacy that is both very close to my heart and also very new to me, in the details. More than anything I've been so honored and excited to be working with an incredible group of people on such an interesting and important set of issues. I feel very lucky. On the one hand it feels presumptuous and self-indulgent to speak about Interent freedom in the same breath as other independence and rights movements from our history. On the other hand, I believe that we are on the leading edge of one of the biggest global changes we've ever seen, and there are serious issues of freedom and control at stake. My friend
I spent part of the train ride home today working on a coding project (the Highrise bookmarklet I blogged about wanting on Monday). It's almost done and I'm excited to start using it. I am not a great programmer, but I like it a lot. I only took one CS course in college. I really learned to program in the ~10 years after college, teaching myself from books and online resources, spending a ton of time using view-source to see how web pages were built, and hacking things together using open source tools like WordPress. There is an important and profound combination of things in that last statement, about the hackability and learnability of the web. That combination of things made it possible for me to build a ton of new skills, and really an entire career, because a) it was possible for me to explore how the pros had built things and b) it was really easy to get help online, from documentation wikis, discussion forums and blogs. And now, there are more and more amazing tools that help this process along, from open-source sharing sites like Github to amazing Q&A sites like StackOverflow. Today's success was possible, in large part, thanks to the kind folks who ask questions, post answers, and share code in these places and more. It's amazing, really, so thank you. Further, I can say with absolute honesty, that I owe my career to the openness of the web. To the fact that I've been able to examine, tinker, ask, learn, and experiment in these ways is something that underlies everything else. I guess I'm writing this to remind myself that despite the fact that I'm not a hard-core open source person (I'm writing this on a Mac), I really do feel a profound personal connection to the openness of the web. And that's one reason among many that it's something worth working to protect.

For the past few weeks, I've been involved with a community effort to draft a declaration of freedom for the Internet. On Monday, it went live on the web, and is starting to get discussed. It's been an amazing, fascinating and inspiring year in the internet community. Today, the Verge has a nicely-produced writeup on the Declaration of Internet Freedom which also gets into the story of the last year of internet politics, including the SOPA/PIPA fight. I'm really looking forward to seeing how the Internet plays as an election issue this fall, and how we as a community can work to carry our energy and momentum into the next US congress and administration, as well as on the global front. For me personally, it's been an absolute thrill ride, as I've jumped with both feet into an area of policy, politics and advocacy that is both very close to my heart and also very new to me, in the details. More than anything I've been so honored and excited to be working with an incredible group of people on such an interesting and important set of issues. I feel very lucky. On the one hand it feels presumptuous and self-indulgent to speak about Interent freedom in the same breath as other independence and rights movements from our history. On the other hand, I believe that we are on the leading edge of one of the biggest global changes we've ever seen, and there are serious issues of freedom and control at stake. My friend
I spent part of the train ride home today working on a coding project (the Highrise bookmarklet I blogged about wanting on Monday). It's almost done and I'm excited to start using it. I am not a great programmer, but I like it a lot. I only took one CS course in college. I really learned to program in the ~10 years after college, teaching myself from books and online resources, spending a ton of time using view-source to see how web pages were built, and hacking things together using open source tools like WordPress. There is an important and profound combination of things in that last statement, about the hackability and learnability of the web. That combination of things made it possible for me to build a ton of new skills, and really an entire career, because a) it was possible for me to explore how the pros had built things and b) it was really easy to get help online, from documentation wikis, discussion forums and blogs. And now, there are more and more amazing tools that help this process along, from open-source sharing sites like Github to amazing Q&A sites like StackOverflow. Today's success was possible, in large part, thanks to the kind folks who ask questions, post answers, and share code in these places and more. It's amazing, really, so thank you. Further, I can say with absolute honesty, that I owe my career to the openness of the web. To the fact that I've been able to examine, tinker, ask, learn, and experiment in these ways is something that underlies everything else. I guess I'm writing this to remind myself that despite the fact that I'm not a hard-core open source person (I'm writing this on a Mac), I really do feel a profound personal connection to the openness of the web. And that's one reason among many that it's something worth working to protect.
Share Dialog
Share Dialog
Share Dialog
Share Dialog
Share Dialog
Share Dialog