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#css

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Looking for CMS advice

Hey Web devs!

Do you have any suggestions, tips, opinions, dos, don’ts about headless CMSes?

I have a growing list of small/mid non-profits and collectives asking for my help to (re)make their website. I totally want to help, but I don’t have much time, especially considering that they generally have little or no funding—I would most definitely point them to @VillageOneCoop, otherwise.

Therefore, I want a super simple and replicable solution where I can copy-paste most of the code, while providing them with a stable, fast, and modern solution. I had a look at the Headless CMS section in the Jamstack website, but I need opinions from people who actually used some of that software already.

Needs

  • I want to code and configure everything using @eleventy
  • Admin interface (#WebApp) for the client to add pages and write posts
  • Static website in the front-end
  • Simple and reliable CI/CD
  • No/minimal maintenance after the first setup
  • Self-hostable (I was taking this for granted so much that I forgot to write it)
  • #OpenSource

Nice to have

  • Possibly using #Deno, not #NodeJS
  • Allowing the client to customize a bit their website through the admin interface, with a GUI
  • CMS app packaged on @yunohost
  • No CMS vendor lock-in
  • I’d love to write as little JavaScript as possible
  • #FreeSoftware

Absolutely not

Please, boost this and ask around! Links to videos, tutorials, and resources are welcome.

People whose perspective I would really value: @zachleat @harryfk @deno_land @jaredwhite @vanillaweb @stefan @mxbck @WeirdWriter @deadsuperhero (Sorry if I am spamming you!)

Jamstack.orgHeadless CMS - Top Content Management Systems | JamstackCheck out this showcase of some of the best, open source headless CMSes. This is community-drive so be sure to submit your favorite CMS today!
#Eleventy#11ty#CMS

Meet Rayhunter:
A New Open Source Tool from EFF to Detect Cellular Spying

At EFF we spend a lot of time thinking about Street Level Surveillance technologies
—the technologies used by police and other authorities to spy on you while you are going about your everyday life
—such as automated license plate readers,
facial recognition,
surveillance camera networks,
and cell-site simulators (. #CSS ).

Rayhunter is a new open source tool we’ve created that runs off an affordable mobile hotspot that we hope empowers everyone,
regardless of technical skill,
to help search out CSS around the world.

CSS
(also known as #Stingrays or #IMSI #catchers)
are devices that masquerade as legitimate cell-phone towers,
tricking phones within a certain radius into connecting to the device rather than a tower.

CSS operate by conducting a general search of all cell phones within the device’s radius.

Law enforcement use CSS to pinpoint the location of phones
often with greater accuracy than other techniques such as cell site location information (CSLI)
and without needing to involve the phone company at all.

CSS can also log International Mobile Subscriber Identifiers (IMSI numbers) unique to each SIM card,
or hardware serial numbers (IMEIs) of all of the mobile devices within a given area.

Some CSS may have advanced features allowing law enforcement to intercept communications in some circumstances.

What makes CSS especially interesting, as compared to other street level surveillance, is that
so little is known about how commercial CSS work.

We don’t fully know what capabilities they have
or what exploits in the phone network they take advantage of to ensnare and spy on our phones, though we have some ideas.

We also know very little about how cell-site simulators are deployed in the US and around the world.

There is no strong evidence either way about whether CSS are commonly being used in the US to spy on First Amendment protected activities
such as protests, communication between journalists and sources, or religious gatherings.

There is some evidence
—much of it circumstantial
—that CSS have been used in the US to spy on protests.

There is also evidence that CSS are used somewhat extensively by US law enforcement,
spyware operators, and scammers.

We know even less about how CSS are being used in other countries,
though it's a safe bet that in other countries CSS are also used by law enforcement.

Much of these gaps in our knowledge are due to a lack of solid, empirical evidence about the function and usage of these devices.

Police departments are resistant to releasing logs of their use,
even when they are kept.

The companies that manufacture CSS are unwilling to divulge details of how they work.

Until now, to detect the presence of CSS, researchers and users have had to either rely on Android apps on rooted phones,
or sophisticated and expensive software-defined radio rigs.

Previous solutions have also focused on attacks on the legacy 2G cellular network, which is almost entirely shut down in the U.S.

Seeking to learn from and improve on previous techniques for CSS detection we have developed a better, cheaper alternative that works natively on the modern 4G network.

eff.org/deeplinks/2025/03/meet

Electronic Frontier Foundation · Meet Rayhunter: A New Open Source Tool from EFF to Detect Cellular SpyingRayhunter is a new open source tool we’ve created that runs off an affordable mobile hotspot that we hope empowers everyone, regardless of technical skill, to help search out cell-site simulators (CSS) around the world.

Hi, #Today I decided to try to #getfedihired — I've got many years of experience with web development, programming and production (#HTML, #CSS, #Javascript), I can make myself useful in anything on the open-source side of back end, i.e. the #Perl, #Python, #PHP, #MySQL, #Linux kind of area.

I live in #Sydney Australia and would be happy to work in-office, remote or hybrid.

Let me know of any opportunities, or pass this on to anyone else who might know of something? Thanks.

I'm editing my custom CSS, trying to change the mascot for another PNG or even hiding the poor guy (I'm sorry but I'm bored)

I have no real knowledge of CSS, I just write things and see what happens.

The Inspector shows this code below, so I've copypasted it and changed the url to another pic, but it didn't work.
Any ideas? Please and thank you.

<div class="drawer__inner__mastodon"><img alt="" draggable="false" src="cdn.masto.host/mastodonart/sit"></div>

Flexy flex layout for any number n of items such that we have:

👉 at most 3 items on a row
👉 at least 2 items on a row IF we have at least 2 items in total

In only 5 (display, flex-wrap, gap, flex and flex-basis override) CSS declarations, working for any number n of items! 🎇

Because someone asked for this on reddit reddit.com/r/css/comments/1jay

Here is the @codepen demo codepen.io/thebabydino/pen/OPJ

#CSS#flexbox#layout

this is it, folks! we are in the final week before submissions are due for GOOD INTERNET, a new print periodical magazine about all the things that make the #web fun: things like the #smallweb, the fediverse, the #indieweb, and efforts to actively fight #enshittification. submissions are open until MARCH 15.

check the submission guidelines or sign up for email alerts to be notified when we publish in may!

goodinternetmagazine.com

if this is your first time hearing about this, you still have enough time to come up with and write an article or complete a digital #art piece, if you're passionate about the #internet and want to write about it! :) bloggers, it's your time to shine!~

i can't wait to show y'all the incredible stories that have been submitted from all over the 'net, and some of the coolest art i've seen about the web!

thank you to everyone who's been so supportive of this project already. this is why this side of the internet is amazing. ❤️ please boost, if you can; i want to make sure i did everything i could to include as many diverse voices as i can.

thank you! 🤟

original post: tilde.zone/@xandra/11391327776

goodinternetmagazine.comgood internet magazine | for the small webA print and digital magazine coming soon.

Since 2009, I've been contributing to open web tools & standards, with a focus on CSS and related platform features at the W3C. But that work takes resources, making it hard for independent contributors like us @OddBird to stay involved.

We need support. If you appreciate what we're doing, you (or your company) can sponsor our work directly:

opencollective.com/oddbird-ope

Let's keep building an open web for everyone.

opencollective.comOddBird Open Source - Open CollectiveWe love contributing to the languages & tools developers rely on. Our focus is Popover & Anchor Positioning polyfills, and CSS specifications for functions, mixins, and responsive typography. Help us keep that work sustainable and focused on your needs!

just under TWO WEEKS until the submission deadline for Good Internet magazine!

☂️ Good Internet launches in May 2025. it's a volunteer-run, not-for-profit print and digital quarterly magazine for personal website owners and those interested in using the internet as a means of self-expression, art, and recreation.

🔎 we're looking for 1,500 to 4,000 word articles about anything for that audience!

👉 this means #webdev hobbyists, digital (and traditional) #artists, #internet culture enthusiasts, #technology nerds, #socialmedia expatriates, & anyone who wants to unplug from the corporate-owned #web.

topics could be:

* internet history
* personal websites & blogs
* #accessibility on the #indieweb
* finding inspiration for a #blog
* #webdesign trends (current or old)
* running from the #enshittification of the web
* lessons or post-mortems from web projects
* news or overviews of #opensource projects
* #privacy on the indieweb

🔍 also looking for any #art submissions centered around the web, coding, internet culture, and digital art!

if it relates to hobbies on "this side of the web," we probably want to run it!

✨ you can have your article submitted as text and images only OR you can code a whole webpage that helps tell your story!

🌊 if you're interested in learning more, sign up for our email list or check out the submission guidelines @ goodinternetmagazine.com!

🙏 (please boost if you can! <3 getting the word out helps so much!)

goodinternetmagazine.comgood internet magazine | for the small webA print and digital magazine coming soon.

Last night I pushed some super basic custom CSS to my photo-focused GoToSocial profile @kamera@haugenh.us. While it's no Pixelfed, I like the simplicity of GtS.

To any considering running a personal fediverse instance, I highly recommend checking out GoToSocial. Don't be fooled by it's simplicity, it also gives control in a way no other fediverse platform I've tried has done, including interaction controls, control over post visibility – on ActivityPub as well as the web and RSS feeds – post importing and backdating, and of course custom CSS at both instance and profile levels.

Getting things up an running was easy for me due in large part to the fantastically motivated GtS community. Especially helpful for me were:

  • FediHost by @fedihost for a quick start through dead simple managed hosting.
  • Posty by @oli for a tool to manage old Pixelfed and Mastodon backups.
  • Slurp by @vyr to import and backdate posts from Mastodon and Pixelfed backups (some of which I needed to run through Posty first for reasons).