A small tool to view real-world ActivityPub objects as JSON! Enter a URL
or username from Mastodon or a similar service below, and we'll send a
request with
the right
Accept
header
to the server to view the underlying object.
{
"@context": [
"https://www.w3.org/ns/activitystreams",
"https://fedi.reimu.info/schemas/litepub-0.1.jsonld",
{
"@language": "und"
}
],
"actor": "https://fedi.reimu.info/users/Reiddragon",
"attachment": [],
"attributedTo": "https://fedi.reimu.info/users/Reiddragon",
"cc": [
"https://fedi.reimu.info/users/Reiddragon/followers"
],
"context": "https://fedi.reimu.info/contexts/e65b6562-2806-4b50-96da-a3c10f2033e6",
"conversation": "https://fedi.reimu.info/contexts/e65b6562-2806-4b50-96da-a3c10f2033e6",
"directMessage": false,
"id": "https://fedi.reimu.info/activities/e0fa2630-3b51-475c-928f-4764ef5e3a48",
"object": {
"actor": "https://fedi.reimu.info/users/Reiddragon",
"attachment": [],
"attributedTo": "https://fedi.reimu.info/users/Reiddragon",
"cc": [
"https://fedi.reimu.info/users/Reiddragon/followers"
],
"content": "<p>y’know, as I get more and more into tinkering and writing my own stuff for my desktop, it really becomes obvious just how un-UNIX-y Wayland is, and I do mean this in a really bad way</p><p>with X11 there was still a fair amount of consolidation, but for the most part you had the display server, and then several different programs handling things like window management, keyboard shortcuts, launching programs, etc. This means each component could focus on one thing and do it well, but it also meant you could pick and choose as needed for each component. This just isn’t the case on Wayland, if, for example, you like the window management but don’t like the way it handles keyboard shortcuts then tough shit, you either take the whole package or try to find something else</p><p>and again, it’s still a happy case if it’s a wlroots compositor since that can at least offload the desktop shell to other programs, gnome decided to consolidate even more and move the entire desktop shell into the display server as well, and Plasma isn’t far behind with a significant chunk of the desktop shell running in the compositor as well</p>",
"contentMap": {
"en": "<p>y’know, as I get more and more into tinkering and writing my own stuff for my desktop, it really becomes obvious just how un-UNIX-y Wayland is, and I do mean this in a really bad way</p><p>with X11 there was still a fair amount of consolidation, but for the most part you had the display server, and then several different programs handling things like window management, keyboard shortcuts, launching programs, etc. This means each component could focus on one thing and do it well, but it also meant you could pick and choose as needed for each component. This just isn’t the case on Wayland, if, for example, you like the window management but don’t like the way it handles keyboard shortcuts then tough shit, you either take the whole package or try to find something else</p><p>and again, it’s still a happy case if it’s a wlroots compositor since that can at least offload the desktop shell to other programs, gnome decided to consolidate even more and move the entire desktop shell into the display server as well, and Plasma isn’t far behind with a significant chunk of the desktop shell running in the compositor as well</p>"
},
"context": "https://fedi.reimu.info/contexts/e65b6562-2806-4b50-96da-a3c10f2033e6",
"conversation": "https://fedi.reimu.info/contexts/e65b6562-2806-4b50-96da-a3c10f2033e6",
"id": "https://fedi.reimu.info/objects/f91cd32f-7071-415a-aca2-1681b8b923ce",
"published": "2024-11-22T20:35:16.832077Z",
"sensitive": null,
"source": {
"content": "y'know, as I get more and more into tinkering and writing my own stuff for my desktop, it really becomes obvious just how un-UNIX-y Wayland is, and I do mean this in a really bad way\r\n\r\nwith X11 there was still a fair amount of consolidation, but for the most part you had the display server, and then several different programs handling things like window management, keyboard shortcuts, launching programs, etc. This means each component could focus on one thing and do it well, but it also meant you could pick and choose as needed for each component. This just isn't the case on Wayland, if, for example, you like the window management but don't like the way it handles keyboard shortcuts then tough shit, you either take the whole package or try to find something else\r\n\r\nand again, it's still a happy case if it's a wlroots compositor since that can at least offload the desktop shell to other programs, gnome decided to consolidate even more and move the entire desktop shell into the display server as well, and Plasma isn't far behind with a significant chunk of the desktop shell running in the compositor as well",
"mediaType": "text/markdown"
},
"summary": "",
"tag": [],
"to": [
"https://www.w3.org/ns/activitystreams#Public"
],
"type": "Note"
},
"published": "2024-11-22T20:35:16.832011Z",
"tag": [],
"to": [
"https://www.w3.org/ns/activitystreams#Public"
],
"type": "Create"
}