John Colagioia

Hi, I work on a variety of things, most of which I talk about more on my blog than on social media. Here, you’ll probably find me talking mostly talking about Free Culture works and sometimes technology.

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Joined 1 year ago
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Cake day: July 23rd, 2023

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  • Always good to see more effort to surface these things. A couple of possible enhancements come to mind.

    • Pepper & Carrot probably belongs under comics, and/or comics belongs as a subset of fiction.
    • It’d be great to filter by license, maybe similar to what Openverse (which you already have listed) does. I know that Creative Commons doesn’t see a problem with incompatible licenses, but I feel like people in the space have strong feelings about how “free/libre” it is to say that something can’t be used commercially (whatever that means) or can’t be altered.
    • If you want a pile of fiction of various sorts, at the risk of self-promoting, I spotlight (and ideally have discussions around) Free Culture works on Saturdays. https://john.colagioia.net/blog/tag/bookclub/ (And a bunch of the links actually lead to collections.)
    • Another pile, you’ll need to figure out how to sift through on your own (I haven’t had the time to figure out how to parse it), but Chris “Sanglorian” Sakkas posted the (I imagine) final backup of his Free and Open Works wiki, sort of your predecessor project. (Edit: I stupidly forgot the link https://archive.org/details/freeand-open-works-20200811084450)
    • Too much manual labor, I realize, especially as the list expands, but ideally, it’d be nice to have some idea of what lives at the other end of a link beyond the format. The videos especially could plausibly be anything…

    Thanks for getting this rolling!




  • My half-solution to this has always been to refer to where I’m working in my notes, like a file, method name, and maybe control structure if warranted. I’ve never needed to take that final step (hence half-solution), but this carries about enough information that someone could hack together a quick program to merge the notes and code in a reasonable way.

    While (as I say) I’ve never specifically needed it, though, at work I’ve often wanted to do that and take the next step of sifting through version control, the ticketing system, and team chats to pull a complete view of what’s been happening around a particular chunk of code. I point that all out, because I think that you’re on the right track, however you ultimately solve that problem for yourself.