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://snack.social/schemas/litepub-0.1.jsonld",
{
"@language": "und"
}
],
"actor": "https://snack.social/users/bhtooefr",
"attachment": [],
"attributedTo": "https://snack.social/users/bhtooefr",
"cc": [
"https://snack.social/users/bhtooefr/followers"
],
"content": "<span class=\"h-card\"><a class=\"u-url mention\" data-user=\"APaHID2PK09XqSby9A\" href=\"https://zirk.us/@ShaulaEvans\" rel=\"ugc\">@<span>ShaulaEvans</span></a></span> AFAIK the one I have is vacuum-insulated and has an entirely stainless steel path - it's one of the generic 4 liter Chinese ones (like, "4 liter water distiller" on eBay) - I think Vevor is selling that now if you want a "name brand"?<br/><br/>one thing, though: a water distiller fundamentally has to vaporize water, and then cool that water back down below the boiling point (which is what the fan in the top does) - AFAIK that means that the energy of changing the water's phase, which would be 540 cal or about 2260 J, *must* end up in the room air. for a liter of water, AFAIK that's about 0.63 kWh. (this is in addition to the energy used heating the water up to the boiling point, although that's significantly less, and you could reduce how much heat is released into the room by removing the freshly distilled water from the room.)",
"contentMap": {
"en": "<span class=\"h-card\"><a class=\"u-url mention\" data-user=\"APaHID2PK09XqSby9A\" href=\"https://zirk.us/@ShaulaEvans\" rel=\"ugc\">@<span>ShaulaEvans</span></a></span> AFAIK the one I have is vacuum-insulated and has an entirely stainless steel path - it's one of the generic 4 liter Chinese ones (like, "4 liter water distiller" on eBay) - I think Vevor is selling that now if you want a "name brand"?<br><br>one thing, though: a water distiller fundamentally has to vaporize water, and then cool that water back down below the boiling point (which is what the fan in the top does) - AFAIK that means that the energy of changing the water's phase, which would be 540 cal or about 2260 J, *must* end up in the room air. for a liter of water, AFAIK that's about 0.63 kWh. (this is in addition to the energy used heating the water up to the boiling point, although that's significantly less, and you could reduce how much heat is released into the room by removing the freshly distilled water from the room.)"
},
"context": "tag:zirk.us,2024-11-11:objectId=131478538:objectType=Conversation",
"conversation": "tag:zirk.us,2024-11-11:objectId=131478538:objectType=Conversation",
"id": "https://snack.social/objects/6e4fde5d-9454-47c0-b298-f0e099c558bb",
"inReplyTo": "https://zirk.us/users/ShaulaEvans/statuses/113463728081444995",
"published": "2024-11-11T15:23:20.303503Z",
"sensitive": false,
"source": {
"content": "@ShaulaEvans@zirk.us AFAIK the one I have is vacuum-insulated and has an entirely stainless steel path - it's one of the generic 4 liter Chinese ones (like, \"4 liter water distiller\" on eBay) - I think Vevor is selling that now if you want a \"name brand\"?\n\none thing, though: a water distiller fundamentally has to vaporize water, and then cool that water back down below the boiling point (which is what the fan in the top does) - AFAIK that means that the energy of changing the water's phase, which would be 540 cal or about 2260 J, *must* end up in the room air. for a liter of water, AFAIK that's about 0.63 kWh. (this is in addition to the energy used heating the water up to the boiling point, although that's significantly less, and you could reduce how much heat is released into the room by removing the freshly distilled water from the room.)",
"mediaType": "text/plain"
},
"summary": "",
"tag": [
{
"href": "https://zirk.us/users/ShaulaEvans",
"name": "@ShaulaEvans@zirk.us",
"type": "Mention"
}
],
"to": [
"https://zirk.us/users/ShaulaEvans",
"https://www.w3.org/ns/activitystreams#Public"
],
"type": "Note"
}