• Nolto.Social is gone, but is has shown the Demand!

    Nolto.social started as a small experiment as a free alternative to LinkedIn. The author wanted to explore ActivityPub and see what could be built. There was no funding, no team, no roadmap. Just an idea and some time.

    Within a few weeks, almost a thousand people signed up. Companies created pages. Articles were posted. Events were shared. I never marketed it. It spread through blogs and word of mout

    Nolto.Social [16.02.2026]

    According to the author, Nolto was never meant to be a polished product. It was one person building something interesting to see what would happen. Now, the author has decided to shut it down.

    Some might dismiss it as another AI project failing. – I see it differently.

    What Nolto Really Proved

    Nolto demonstrated demand. A private project attracted users and companies in record time. It showed that people want this. That companies want this. The author open-sourced the code and had the courage to stop it when it became clear the project was beyond their capacity to maintain.

    What I see here is an opportunity!

    Or as JTensetti writes it:

    Nolto proved something simple:

    You don’t need permission to experiment.You do not need funding to create value.

    And you don’t need to be “approved” to build.

    To everyone who builds, even when it’s uncomfortable — keep going.

    The open web is not defined by gatekeepers.

    It is defined by those who dare to build.

    Nolto.Social (16.02.2026)
    Fediverse reactions
  • AI Won’t Turn Everyone Into Developers- Because Most People Don’t Want to Be Developers

    The AI hype claims that LLMs will make everyone a coder. I say: that’s pretty much BS. Most people don’t want to build software. They want their problems solved, preferably without lifting a finger.

    Joan Westenberg nails this so well in her recent article: The “everyone will code” myth ignores decades of proof. We’ve had WordPress (since 2003) and desktop publishing tools (since the 1980s), yet most still pay for solutions or use templates.

    The real shift? AI will make existing tools smarter — not turn everybody into vibe-coders.

    Read her article that’s just so spot on: https://www.joanwestenberg.com/ai-twitters-favourite-lie-everyone-wants-to-be-a-developer/

  • Find me on Nolto!

    AAhh – Nolto has gone

    Nolto was never meant to grow.

    [… ]

    It was one person building something interesting to see what would happen.

    At this point I have decided to shut it down.

    Ahh too bad.

    But I respect the decision of this guy! He made quite a thing but also admits that he’s just a one man show and doesn’t have the experience to operate such a thing. I might have done the same in his situation.


    Since I am moving more and more away from BigTech (see here…), I was wondering if we need a Fediverse alternative for LinkedIn. I don’t even want to go into the details but LinkedIn shows the same bad symptoms as all other big “social” media plattforms.

    Xing, Fediverse, …?

    Yes, in Germany we have Xing, but Xing is mainly in Germany and they stripped a lot of community features that made it a bit unattractive.

    Another Fediverse-account? Yes, would be an alternative. But LinkedIn just specialized on career-features. Like showing your past stations in your career and your profession in the profile. That’s just super useful.

    Nolto The Professional Network That Respects Your Freedom

    Then, just recently I read about “nolto.social“. Which aims at … well .. exactly that! Being an alternative to LinkedIn.

    The Nolto startpage is pretty clear: Own your data. No algorithms, no ads, no lock-in. Okay, shut up and take my money. Oh, It’s free!

    Import data from LinkedIn

    I just signed up yesterday and exported all my LinkedIn data (which … isn’t a lot, since I deleted almost all content). Now my profile is filled! The career details, education and skills are all maintained. Great!

    Connect!

    Now let’s try who’ll join. Find me there! (or not, as it shut down)
    https://nolto.social/join/PYEM6Z

    Don’t worry, this blog has existed for long and will remain where it is. But I’ll give Nolto a chance as well.

    Fediverse reactions
  • StaffEng is back!

    I just saw that the StaffEng Podcast is coming back!

    We’re rebooting the Staff Engineer podcast with a specific focus: practitioners using AI to deliver valuable outcomes with specific examples

    If you don’t know StaffEng, its About Staff Engineering, “Leadership beyond the management track”.

    At most technology companies, you’ll reach Senior Software Engineer, the career level, in five to eight years. At that point your path branches, and you have the opportunity to pursue engineering management or continue down the path of technical excellence to become a Staff Engineer.

    Add the Podcast to your player, new episodes might come soon: https://podcast.staffeng.com

  • Firefox vs Vivaldi – A Matter of Engines, Not Just Geography

    The world is complicated. I like the campaign – regaining your digital independence step by step. Like changing from X to Mastodon or from Chrome to another browser. For me, the next logical step was reconsidering my browser choice.

    Firefox was the first choice, but then I wondered: why not Vivaldi? A Norwegian developed browser – supporting a european company. A post on Mastodon quickly shifted to a more fundamental aspect:

    • Vivaldi is built on Chromium, which is dominated by Google.
    • Firefox, while developed by the U.S.-based Mozilla Foundation, maintains its own browser engine – one of the last alternatives to Chromium’s dominance.

      So, what matters more? Supporting a European company or preserving engine diversity? It’s not just about where the browser is developed, but also how diverse the browser landscape can remain …

      (Maybe, if I find a way to sync the bookmarks, I could just use both?)

    • How to migrate Gmail to another Provider without Breaking the Mail History

      This is a practical how-to on moving email from Gmail to another provider.

      The main challenge is Gmail’s label system: one email can have multiple labels and all mails also appear in “All Mail”. Most other providers use folders instead, where an email can only exist in one place. If you migrate without taking this into account, you will most likely end up with duplicated mails or a messy folder structure.

      (more…)
      Fediverse reactions
    • How a User Helped Fixing 4 Bugs with AI (and No Expertise)

      I see a lot of AI skepticism in the dev community — and some of it is fair (okay, maybe “a lot”). Vague bug reports, monster commits, untested code … We’ve proably read it all, and maybe even seen it all.

      Even Mitchell Hashimoto whose post appeared yesterday in my timeline writes “Slop drives me crazy and it feels like 95+% of bug reports”. But … he continues with an impressive story: A Ghostty user with no Zig or macOS experience took crash logs, fed them through AI, reached out on Discord, explained what was done. And the result:

      (more…)
      Fediverse reactions
    • Skipping AI is not going to help you or your career

      I just saw a post on Simon Willison’s blog where he linked to “Don’t fall into the anti-AI hype”. And I pretty much agree on what antirez writes there:

      Whatever you believe about what the Right Thing should be, you can't control it by refusing what is happening right now. Skipping AI is not going to help you or your career.
      Don’t fall into the anti-AI hype – <antirez>
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    • AI Won’t Fix Bad Software Teams

      What do you do an Saturday when you don’t feel well to go out for some activities? Right! Let’s read about Software Engineering and AI!

      Yesterday I read the complete series of the 22 blog posts listet on The AI-Ready Software Developer – Index – Codemanship’s Blog.

      (more…)
      Fediverse reactions
    • The Fear of DevOPs

      I just read Walking Skeletons, Delivery Pipelines & DevOps Drills and came to the paragraph about “throwing s.th over the wall:

      DevOps – the marriage of software development and operations – means that the team writing the solution code also handles these matters. We don’t throw it over the wall to a separate “DevOps” team.

      In the past years I’ve been driving the DevOPS culture and work style. And I just had to smile when I read the article because I can so feel it!

      (more…)
      Fediverse reactions