ysabetwordsmith: Text says Dreamwidth above a yay emoticon. (Dreamwidth Yay)
[personal profile] ysabetwordsmith
Cohost is closing and will disappear completely at the end of December.  If you have not yet finished backing up everything you want to save from that platform, you have just a few days left to do that.

Use this post to announce when you finish reposting your content here (or elsenet).

Find fellow chosters here or look for them in communities like [community profile] eggbug_club or the terrific prompting community [community profile] eggbug_writes.
heya_baru: (Default)
[personal profile] heya_baru

So, for any of my fellow Cohosters, you probably have an archive (or in my case, a git repo...) of Cohost posts that you want to re-upload here, in which case, those posts are probably in markdown format.

I've learned through trial-and-error that there's two ways to deal with this:

1) For the more tech-savvy, use a command-line tool like pandoc. This is how I re-uploaded my stories on Dreamwidth.

Using pandoc to turn Markdown into HTML that you can just copy-and-paste into DW is pretty simple:

pandoc Skykomish_Never_sleeps.md -o Skykomish_Never_sleeps.html

2) As this docs page states, you can place a !markdown directive a the beginning of the entry, and then proceed to just write markdown.

ysabetwordsmith: Text says Dreamwidth above a yay emoticon. (Dreamwidth Yay)
[personal profile] ysabetwordsmith
I've seen two people declare that they have finished reposting their material from Cohost to Dreamwidth.  Are you finished?  Comment below with your accomplishment in case folks are trying to follow the reposts. 
ysabetwordsmith: Text says Dreamwidth above a yay emoticon. (Dreamwidth Yay)
[personal profile] ysabetwordsmith
Now that Cohost has gone to read-only mode, many Cohost refugees are moving to Dreamwidth. (Introduce yourself and find your Cohost friends.) Several new communities have formed to support them here, gather the culture, and reproduce things they loved from Cohost. Look for Interests and Tags such as "Eggbug" or "Cohost" to search for them. See also Let Your Freak Flag Fly for other communities that may interest Cohost refugees.

Does anyone know of more Cohost-related communities than the ones below? Point to them in a comment and I'll add them to this list. Spread the word about such communities so more Cohost refugees can find them.

Read more... )
onlyknownothing: A painting of a man in a bowler hat and suit.  A green apple obscures the man's face. (Default)
[personal profile] onlyknownothing

1.) Markdown Posting

If you miss being able to post via Markdown instead of HTML, the beta features page has an option to opt into the "New Create Entries Page." This allows for creating posts using Markdown, much as the comment function has a Markdown option. Just as with cohost, HTML input into the post will overrule/overwrite the Markdown you're using (if you want to get silly with it).

2.) HTML and CSS Stuff

If you instead want to jump feet-first into the brave new world of all-HTML posts, I recommend w3schools as a reference and primer. They have really good walkthroughs of current-gen HTML5, as well as CSS (and even JavaScript, though that doesn't apply here). I refer to them regularly when Markdown is insufficient and I can't remember what the various style options for an HTML element are.

3.) Your "Dashboard" is Public

I haven't seen any evidence of this being misused here, but it's an old carryover from the LiveJournal days and people coming from cohost tend to be surprised by it. Everyone can see what shows up on your Reading page, unless the original creator of the post has restricted that entry. Not only is it an open HTML link, but it's literally a link on your main page for anybody to click on. If you wouldn't want someone else seeing that you're following something, you might want to use a separate feed-reader and just subscribe to the feed there (which you can also do for actual public dreamwidth journals, as they have an RSS and Atom link on each front page).

4.) You Can Customize Your Journal

Another carryover from the LiveJournal days, but also something which used to be a big deal on Tumblr and wasn't possible on cohost. If you're into the CSS crimes stuff, or just want something which reflects your personality/interests, you can customize your journal's CSS to give it a unique look. You could easily get very in-depth with this if you wanted. Or heck, just make it look (mostly) like cohost did if you'd like - you could pull the CSS off cohost itself as long as it's up, or use their rehosting tool (once it's live). I actually specifically incorporated the "cohost font" of Atkinson Hyperlegible onto my page because I like how easy it is on the eyes.

5.) Tags Don't Work Like Cohost

Yes, you can tag your posts - but unlike cohost and Tumblr, they aren't global. You can't click on a tag and see other people who have used it, unless it's a tag in a community (and even then, those community tags only apply to that particular community). There's no "I enjoy seeing the art people make, so I follow the 'artists on dreamwidth' tag." Interests are the closest equivalent; instead of each post being tagged individually, people list their overall interests and you can either search them or browse through them to find people who've said they like that thing. That said, there's nothing requiring people to post about the things they're interested in.

6.) It Takes a Bit More Work to Connect

This is a very early "web 2.0" system. As in, "web 2.0" was coined in 1999 per the Wikipedia article I just linked and the code for LiveJournal (on which dreamwidth is based) started being written that same year. There's been 25 years of intervening development since then designed to make the "social" part of social media more seamless, and this place doesn't really have any of that. That means you have to do more of the legwork yourself. You can't engage with posts or users without actually engaging with them - there's no reblogging/rechosting, no "likes," nothing on any post except perhaps a comment box. So you're going to have to search, reach out, or maybe just DIY it. There are communities such as this one and [community profile] addme which make it possible to find other people, and [personal profile] ysabetwordsmith's [community profile] followfriday is a community meant for recommending other communities. You can also create your own! It looks like someone's already made [community profile] eggbug_writes as a community for former cohost writers and writing-prompt-makers, and there's nothing that says you can't create some other central meeting-place communities for people to regather and find one-another again.

7.) Protect Yourself

You can turn off or limit Private Messages in your Account Settings under the Privacy tab, which is also how you can turn off anonymous comments and IP logging (which is on by default). You can also ban users directly from commenting on your own journal page there too. I encourage you to liberally take the actions you need to make it hard for other people to make your life more unpleasant. If anybody is actively violating the Terms of Service (section XI - Member Conduct), you can also report them... but there is no sitewide blocking or muting like there was on cohost, so keep that in mind and take proactive steps to make sure you aren't giving access you don't want to people you don't want having access to you. This place is generally more insular due to its old design functions - it takes work to search out others, which limits discoverability of people you want to know and people you don't in equal measure - but it's still possible for you to show up in the Latest Things global feed (which is a true global feed), so please take steps to take care of yourself in advance if someone barging in and being an awful human on your page will be worse than a "sigh, delete, ban" response for you.

I haven't seen anything of the sort happen, but that doesn't mean it can't. I never saw any of the cohost-related issues first-hand either.

ysabetwordsmith: Text says Dreamwidth above a yay emoticon. (Dreamwidth Yay)
[personal profile] ysabetwordsmith
As of October 1, 2024, Cohost has gone to read-only mode.

"in read-only mode, cohost will look and function about the same as it does now. the dashboard, profiles, tag feeds, bookmarked tag feed, search, comments, and pretty much everything else will still function. you will not be able to make new posts, edit or delete existing posts, like posts, follow, unfollow, block, or silence users, edit your profile, or do any other action that would involve changing cohost. due to a bug, account deletions may not be available until after we have processed all data exports."
-- Cohost Staff

You still have time to copy your content to other platforms and/or archive your old Cohost pages via sites like Wayback or Ghost. The site is supposed to remain visible up to the end of 2024. It will be deleted on December 31. On January 1, 2025, the redirect will be set to Wayback to prevent linkrot.

Read more... )
ysabetwordsmith: (moment of silence)
[personal profile] ysabetwordsmith
Today is the last day of posting at Cohost, before it goes read-only on October 1.  You still have a little time to make goodbye or find-me-here posts, and do any other last-minute wrapups.

Here is a place where you can share all your sad feels, nostalgia, elegies for Cohost, etc.  If you've already written some, you can copy them from your blog or just link them here if you wish.  People are writing some really lovely stuff on this topic, and it's worth sharing.

It's okay to feel bad about a platform closing.  Don't let anyone tell you that it's silly.  If it's important to you, then you have a right to mourn it.  Disenfranchised grief sucks.  You can work through it in your own way, and sometimes talking about it with sympathetic friends can help.
follypersist: photo of juliet, their hair tousled by the wind (Default)
[personal profile] follypersist
if we all took one thing away from cohost let it be—for the love of god let us all comment more. tell people what you think or that you like their work more. don't be weird but do be sincere and err on the side of information. actually talking to one another, in little asynchronous ways, is the only way out of an automated algorithmic future. each time you express something to another human being, you make a foothold against the tide.
ysabetwordsmith: Text says Dreamwidth above a yay emoticon. (Dreamwidth Yay)
[personal profile] ysabetwordsmith
Posts by Cohost users indicate that many people have found that platform especially safe and welcoming of diversity and weirdness. While Dreamwidth is not the same as Cohost, it has plenty of weird people and is more congenial than average for social media. Dreamwidth also offers a good toolkit for privacy and moderation. You can share as much or as little as you want, with control over who gets to see what you post on your blog. This makes Dreamwidth a pretty safe place. You are not alone.

Decorative text says Let Your Freak Flag Fly.

Read more... )
ysabetwordsmith: Text says Dreamwidth above a yay emoticon. (Dreamwidth Yay)
[personal profile] ysabetwordsmith
This post is especially for those folks coming to Dreamwidth from Cohost, who may wish to reconnect with other people they know from that venue.

Cohost is closing. Registration shut down on September 9 when the closure was announced. It will go read-only on October 1, 2024 and disappear entirely at the end of 2024. See "Cohost News" for more on this topic and what you can do about it. Use the "Introduction / Friending Meme" to say hello and meet new people here.

It's a good idea to make a farewell post on Cohost NOW while you still can (up through September 30, 2024). Tell people where else to find you online, whether your blog is moving or closing, and any other important details.

If you want to preserve your Cohost content, one thing you can do is save your farewell post, profile, or other pages using Wayback, Ghost, or other archive sites. This helps you and your friends remember what it looked like before it disappears. If you have art or fiction on Cohost, you may want to consider sites like AO3 that specialize in those materials. Many people are copying their Cohost content to Dreamwidth too.

Use this post to tell folks that you are on Dreamwidth, what your Cohost account was, and who you're looking for here that you knew back there. You can use the template in a comment below, on your blog, or anywhere else you find it useful. This one is shorter than the more detailed "Introduction / Friending Meme" is.

Read more... )
ysabetwordsmith: Text says Dreamwidth above a yay emoticon. (Dreamwidth Yay)
[personal profile] ysabetwordsmith
These are some articles about the upcoming closure of Cohost and what you can do about that. Please pass the word, and share any resources you have.

See "Cohort Is Closing" for resources on using Dreamwidth instead. Use the "Introduction / Friending Meme" to say hello and meet new people or find your Cohost friends here.  You might also like [community profile] eggbug_club.

Read more... )
ysabetwordsmith: Text says Dreamwidth above a yay emoticon. (Dreamwidth Yay)
[personal profile] ysabetwordsmith
Cohost is closing. Registration shut down on September 9 when the closure was announced. It will go read-only on October 1, 2024 and disappear entirely at the end of 2024. See "Cohost News" for more on this topic and what you can do about it. Use the "Introduction / Friending Meme" to say hello and meet new people or find your Cohost friends here. A mourning post is here.

If you are on Cohost, you may find Dreamwidth a viable replacement. Scroll down for more resources about this.

For people on any other service, this is an opportunity to scoop new users. Listen to why people liked Cohost and say they will miss it. Does your favorite service meet any of those needs? If so, encourage people to move there instead. Gathering more of your friends together will make any service more fun to use.

For example, people have described Cohost as friendly, creative, innovative, user-expressive, community-oriented, with good features and moral developers. Dreamwidth has free, paid, and premium levels so you can choose the package that suits your needs. It offers private blogs, themed communities, and pretty robust moderation tools that let you delete comments you don't want on your blog or block people so they can't bother you. It's easy to find bloggers you like and nurture a sense of community. You can make short posts, carry long conversations, share images, and so on. Want a hate-free online space? It's not that hard to make one. Want to make a Cohost-like experience on Dreamwidth? Consider starting a community or using feeds. Looking for communities on your favorite topics to replace the Cohost accounts that you used to enjoy? Check out [community profile] followfriday for suggestions, or watch [site community profile] dw_community_promo. You can also use the search box in your blog header or the Interests page. Community Thursdays is just a custom of folks posting what they've done in communities recently, whether posting or commenting.

Read more... )

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