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.
{
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"content": "Clip from the final day of the 2021 Practical Shooting Training Group summit. It’s a three-day event where eleven instructors each taught four two-hour blocks of practical-shooting instruction to the students in attendance and were free to jump in classes when they weren’t teaching. I wrapped up my teaching at lunchtime on the second day and jumped in world champion Ben Stoeger’s training block on stage planning and execution. Going through “Finding 100” with US national champion Mason Lane the previous day gave me some confidence that shooting with looser sight pictures would keep points acceptable while cutting stage time, and that’s how it worked out here. Programming in continuous shooting instead of shoot-move-shoot also played a big part.<br /><br /><a href=\"https://www.minds.com/search?f=top&t=all&q=uspsa\" title=\"#uspsa\" class=\"u-url hashtag\" target=\"_blank\">#uspsa</a> <a href=\"https://www.minds.com/search?f=top&t=all&q=ipsc\" title=\"#ipsc\" class=\"u-url hashtag\" target=\"_blank\">#ipsc</a> <a href=\"https://www.minds.com/search?f=top&t=all&q=competitionshooting\" title=\"#competitionshooting\" class=\"u-url hashtag\" target=\"_blank\">#competitionshooting</a> <a href=\"https://www.minds.com/search?f=top&t=all&q=practicalshootingtraininggroup\" title=\"#practicalshootingtraininggroup\" class=\"u-url hashtag\" target=\"_blank\">#practicalshootingtraininggroup</a> <a href=\"https://www.minds.com/search?f=top&t=all&q=pstgsummit\" title=\"#pstgsummit\" class=\"u-url hashtag\" target=\"_blank\">#pstgsummit</a>",
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"url": "https://www.minds.com/newsfeed/1241206108553199616",
"published": "2021-05-18T01:49:55+00:00",
"source": {
"content": "Clip from the final day of the 2021 Practical Shooting Training Group summit. It’s a three-day event where eleven instructors each taught four two-hour blocks of practical-shooting instruction to the students in attendance and were free to jump in classes when they weren’t teaching. I wrapped up my teaching at lunchtime on the second day and jumped in world champion Ben Stoeger’s training block on stage planning and execution. Going through “Finding 100” with US national champion Mason Lane the previous day gave me some confidence that shooting with looser sight pictures would keep points acceptable while cutting stage time, and that’s how it worked out here. Programming in continuous shooting instead of shoot-move-shoot also played a big part.\n\n#uspsa #ipsc #competitionshooting #practicalshootingtraininggroup #pstgsummit",
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"id": "https://www.minds.com/api/activitypub/users/950733802559250450/entities/urn:activity:1241206108553199616/activity"
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{
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"content": "Live feed from the volcano on Reykjanes peninsula:<br /><br /><a href=\"https://www.ruv.is/frett/2021/03/20/live-feed-from-iceland-volcano\" target=\"_blank\">https://www.ruv.is/frett/2021/03/20/live-feed-from-iceland-volcano</a><br /><br />Reykjanes is an otherworldly place. Generally, your introduction of it comes taking the airport shuttle from Keflavik airport to Reykjavik, driving across miles of solidified lava covered in iridescent green moss. You have landed in a very different world!<br /> ",
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"url": "https://www.minds.com/newsfeed/1220783893643792384",
"published": "2021-03-22T17:19:21+00:00",
"source": {
"content": "Live feed from the volcano on Reykjanes peninsula:\n\nhttps://www.ruv.is/frett/2021/03/20/live-feed-from-iceland-volcano\n\nReykjanes is an otherworldly place. Generally, your introduction of it comes taking the airport shuttle from Keflavik airport to Reykjavik, driving across miles of solidified lava covered in iridescent green moss. You have landed in a very different world!\n ",
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"content": "A couple clips practicing Bar Hop on a pair of 7-yard USPSA targets. Goal of the drill is to shoot each target twice from both sides of the bar for a total of eight shots. Here I'm moving both by crossing my feet, which is slow but smooth, and stepping out wide with my lead foot, which is fast but bouncy. You can learn a lot about driving your gun to precise spots on the target despite your movement from shooting this drill.",
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"url": "https://www.minds.com/newsfeed/1216943861463683072",
"published": "2021-03-12T03:00:23+00:00",
"source": {
"content": "A couple clips practicing Bar Hop on a pair of 7-yard USPSA targets. Goal of the drill is to shoot each target twice from both sides of the bar for a total of eight shots. Here I'm moving both by crossing my feet, which is slow but smooth, and stepping out wide with my lead foot, which is fast but bouncy. You can learn a lot about driving your gun to precise spots on the target despite your movement from shooting this drill.",
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"attributedTo": "https://www.minds.com/api/activitypub/users/950733802559250450",
"content": "\"There is only ever one news story on any given day, and it is always the same news story: wealthy and powerful people seek more wealth and power, and narratives are spun to advance these agendas.\"<br /><br /><a href=\"https://caitlinjohnstone.com/2021/03/02/theres-only-one-news-story-repeating-over-and-over-again/\" target=\"_blank\">https://caitlinjohnstone.com/2021/03/02/theres-only-one-news-story-repeating-over-and-over-again/</a>",
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"url": "https://www.minds.com/newsfeed/1214947449347919872",
"published": "2021-03-06T14:47:24+00:00",
"source": {
"content": "\"There is only ever one news story on any given day, and it is always the same news story: wealthy and powerful people seek more wealth and power, and narratives are spun to advance these agendas.\"\n\nhttps://caitlinjohnstone.com/2021/03/02/theres-only-one-news-story-repeating-over-and-over-again/",
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"content": "Two runs on a rhythm drill from Sunday's class. The idea here is to pull the trigger at a fixed cadence and work to make the hits happen. How the shots disperse as you pick up the pace reveals deficiencies in your shooting. The first clip with ~0.25s between shots was a comfortable pace for me with only one C. At ~0.2s, I punched a C/D on one target due to lack of visual precision and a C on another due to moving the gun off the target early. Other problems include firing shots early, high shots due to loose grip, and low shots due to pre-ignition push.",
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"url": "https://www.minds.com/newsfeed/1210624129090232320",
"published": "2021-02-22T16:28:02+00:00",
"source": {
"content": "Two runs on a rhythm drill from Sunday's class. The idea here is to pull the trigger at a fixed cadence and work to make the hits happen. How the shots disperse as you pick up the pace reveals deficiencies in your shooting. The first clip with ~0.25s between shots was a comfortable pace for me with only one C. At ~0.2s, I punched a C/D on one target due to lack of visual precision and a C on another due to moving the gun off the target early. Other problems include firing shots early, high shots due to loose grip, and low shots due to pre-ignition push.",
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"id": "https://www.minds.com/api/activitypub/users/950733802559250450/entities/urn:activity:1210624129090232320/activity"
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"content": "Goal for today's practice was staying more relaxed on the draw, driving my vision to more precise spots on the targets, and visual patience on tight shots. The three video clips show working the same drill with dry fire, deficiency training, and live fire. The use of dry fire and deficiency training slashes round count with minimal impact to training effectiveness.<br /><br />Clip 1: Here I'm dry firing the entire drill. I don't need to fire live ammo to verify that I'm drawing smoothly, looking at a spot on the A-zone of the first two targets, seeing a flash of green fiber at the spot where I'm looking, or gripping the gun solidly and evenly. Same applies to the target coming into the second position by the barrels. I'm simulating the trigger press on all of these targets by prepping the trigger to the wall. The fourth target is at 20 yards. Here I'm taking up the slack on the trigger during the transition, then pressing through when I see a stable front sight centered on the A-zone. I'm letting out and pressing a dead trigger for the second shot, then ripping the gun over to the last target for two quick shots. On it, I'm looking at the A-zone and whacking the trigger twice as soon as I feel like the gun is lined up.<br /><br />Clip 2: Same as clip one, but I'm firing live rounds on the far target to verify that I'm executing my marksmanship fundamentals correctly, work on resetting the trigger quickly, and ensure that I'm not dragging shots off the target when transitioning quickly onto the last target. A future training focus will be shooting sooner coming into position, for which I might shoot the first round on the third target, dry fire the second round on it, then shoot the first round on the fourth target.<br /><br />Clip 3: Live rounds on all the targets. Here I'm shooting all ten rounds like I would in a match to verify that I'm being honest in my dry fire. All shots were in the A-zone, and my transition from the far target to the last one was around 0.33 s. I'm good with that! <br />",
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"url": "https://www.minds.com/newsfeed/1208978878843428864",
"published": "2021-02-18T03:30:23+00:00",
"source": {
"content": "Goal for today's practice was staying more relaxed on the draw, driving my vision to more precise spots on the targets, and visual patience on tight shots. The three video clips show working the same drill with dry fire, deficiency training, and live fire. The use of dry fire and deficiency training slashes round count with minimal impact to training effectiveness.\n\nClip 1: Here I'm dry firing the entire drill. I don't need to fire live ammo to verify that I'm drawing smoothly, looking at a spot on the A-zone of the first two targets, seeing a flash of green fiber at the spot where I'm looking, or gripping the gun solidly and evenly. Same applies to the target coming into the second position by the barrels. I'm simulating the trigger press on all of these targets by prepping the trigger to the wall. The fourth target is at 20 yards. Here I'm taking up the slack on the trigger during the transition, then pressing through when I see a stable front sight centered on the A-zone. I'm letting out and pressing a dead trigger for the second shot, then ripping the gun over to the last target for two quick shots. On it, I'm looking at the A-zone and whacking the trigger twice as soon as I feel like the gun is lined up.\n\nClip 2: Same as clip one, but I'm firing live rounds on the far target to verify that I'm executing my marksmanship fundamentals correctly, work on resetting the trigger quickly, and ensure that I'm not dragging shots off the target when transitioning quickly onto the last target. A future training focus will be shooting sooner coming into position, for which I might shoot the first round on the third target, dry fire the second round on it, then shoot the first round on the fourth target.\n\nClip 3: Live rounds on all the targets. Here I'm shooting all ten rounds like I would in a match to verify that I'm being honest in my dry fire. All shots were in the A-zone, and my transition from the far target to the last one was around 0.33 s. I'm good with that! \n",
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"attributedTo": "https://www.minds.com/api/activitypub/users/950733802559250450",
"content": "\"Bitcoin has made our currency almost useless or valueless.\"<br /><br />—Nigerian Senator Sani Musa<br /><br /><a href=\"https://twitter.com/NGRSenate/status/1359835689513271301\" target=\"_blank\">https://twitter.com/NGRSenate/status/1359835689513271301</a><br /><br />🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣<br />",
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"url": "https://www.minds.com/newsfeed/1208406891981103104",
"published": "2021-02-16T13:37:34+00:00",
"source": {
"content": "\"Bitcoin has made our currency almost useless or valueless.\"\n\n—Nigerian Senator Sani Musa\n\nhttps://twitter.com/NGRSenate/status/1359835689513271301\n\n🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣\n",
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"content": "First cut at pushing speed on Four Aces: draw to a 7-yard target, fire two alphas, reload, then shoot two more alphas. First two clips are dry- and live-fire at normal speed, second two are those clips slowed down to quarter speed. Areas for improvement here include reacting faster to the beep and getting the pistol down and ready for the reload faster. I've been focusing on getting my support hand to the next magazine quickly, but pulling the pistol into position quickly is just as important.",
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"url": "https://www.minds.com/newsfeed/1206955437935341568",
"published": "2021-02-12T13:29:57+00:00",
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"content": "First cut at pushing speed on Four Aces: draw to a 7-yard target, fire two alphas, reload, then shoot two more alphas. First two clips are dry- and live-fire at normal speed, second two are those clips slowed down to quarter speed. Areas for improvement here include reacting faster to the beep and getting the pistol down and ready for the reload faster. I've been focusing on getting my support hand to the next magazine quickly, but pulling the pistol into position quickly is just as important.",
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"content": "Continuing to work on transitions and movement, particularly moving my eyes quickly between precise spots on the targets and not over-confirming sight alignment. These clips from three different dry-fire sessions. I'm typically taking 15–20 minutes to work a scenario, focusing on different aspects of execution like visual focus, grip tension, trigger control, and footwork.<br /><br />Clip one: The first five targets are wide open and begging to be shot quickly, but watching the video immediately afterward it was clear that I was over-aiming on them. Shooting on the tight targets through the port is fine for now.<br /><br />Clip two: I shaved some time by moving my eyes faster between targets, which naturally gets the gun moving faster, and softening the aiming confirmation needed before pulling the trigger.<br /><br />Clip three: El Presidente is a deceptively simple test of high-speed gun handling, as it’s easy to get super tense when pushing speed. This was my first dry-fire session where I was consistently holding a 4 s par time with decent aiming confirmation on all the shots.<br /><br />Clip four: Draw here is to a mini popper, followed by two small and two large targets. The trick is ramping up speed immediately after firing the second shot on the third target. Watching the video didn’t see the speed up on those two targets that seemed possible. My feet ended up in the right place to shoot the targets through the port without having to move them again, but I'm trying to avoid the small steps to get them there, instead trying to position faster my making fewer but larger steps.<br /><br />Clip five: Got going faster on the last two targets in the first shooting position and nailed footwork setting up behind the port.",
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"url": "https://www.minds.com/newsfeed/1203541748172959744",
"published": "2021-02-03T03:25:11+00:00",
"source": {
"content": "Continuing to work on transitions and movement, particularly moving my eyes quickly between precise spots on the targets and not over-confirming sight alignment. These clips from three different dry-fire sessions. I'm typically taking 15–20 minutes to work a scenario, focusing on different aspects of execution like visual focus, grip tension, trigger control, and footwork.\n\nClip one: The first five targets are wide open and begging to be shot quickly, but watching the video immediately afterward it was clear that I was over-aiming on them. Shooting on the tight targets through the port is fine for now.\n\nClip two: I shaved some time by moving my eyes faster between targets, which naturally gets the gun moving faster, and softening the aiming confirmation needed before pulling the trigger.\n\nClip three: El Presidente is a deceptively simple test of high-speed gun handling, as it’s easy to get super tense when pushing speed. This was my first dry-fire session where I was consistently holding a 4 s par time with decent aiming confirmation on all the shots.\n\nClip four: Draw here is to a mini popper, followed by two small and two large targets. The trick is ramping up speed immediately after firing the second shot on the third target. Watching the video didn’t see the speed up on those two targets that seemed possible. My feet ended up in the right place to shoot the targets through the port without having to move them again, but I'm trying to avoid the small steps to get them there, instead trying to position faster my making fewer but larger steps.\n\nClip five: Got going faster on the last two targets in the first shooting position and nailed footwork setting up behind the port.",
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"content": "More practice on transitions and movement. Clips from three different dry-fire sessions here.<br /><br />Clip one: I'm trying to snap my eyes quickly to a precise spot on each target and drive the gun hard in transitions. Harder when you're in motion. Shooting through the port, I'm coming in on a tight partial and then driving onto an open target. I'm prepping the trigger to the wall for the first shot on the partial, then letting it out, prepping back, and pulling through when the dot is stable. This gives me a dead trigger for the last two shots.<br /><br />Clip 2: Side-to-side movement, coming in on a hard shot (roughly an 8\" plate at 25 yards). It doesn't feel like the initial jab step with my lead foot existing the start position is giving me much.<br /><br />Clip 3: I'm liking the footwork entering positions, but there's too much time between when my feet stop moving and when I drop the hammer on a good sight picture. I don't love the time needed for the drop step on the forward move.",
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"url": "https://www.minds.com/newsfeed/1201970786490351616",
"published": "2021-01-29T19:22:44+00:00",
"source": {
"content": "More practice on transitions and movement. Clips from three different dry-fire sessions here.\n\nClip one: I'm trying to snap my eyes quickly to a precise spot on each target and drive the gun hard in transitions. Harder when you're in motion. Shooting through the port, I'm coming in on a tight partial and then driving onto an open target. I'm prepping the trigger to the wall for the first shot on the partial, then letting it out, prepping back, and pulling through when the dot is stable. This gives me a dead trigger for the last two shots.\n\nClip 2: Side-to-side movement, coming in on a hard shot (roughly an 8\" plate at 25 yards). It doesn't feel like the initial jab step with my lead foot existing the start position is giving me much.\n\nClip 3: I'm liking the footwork entering positions, but there's too much time between when my feet stop moving and when I drop the hammer on a good sight picture. I don't love the time needed for the drop step on the forward move.",
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"content": "A takeaway from this past weekend's match was that I'm loosing time on target transitions, particularly while I'm moving, and taking too long to shoot when coming into position.<br /><br />Clip one is a short move where I'm dropping the hammer on a moderately difficult partial target after stepping across the box. I'm trying to move aggressively, get my eyes focused on a precise spot on the target, drive the gun there, and break the shot as soon as the dot stabilizes sufficiently.<br /><br />Clip two starts with transitions onto two open targets while backing up, a short move, coming into position on an easy target, then dropping the hammer on a tight partial. I'm prepping the trigger to the wall then letting up for the first three targets, prepping to the wall and pulling through for the first shot on the fourth, then prepping & pulling the dead trigger for the second shot. The Stock 2 that I'm using has a perceptible wall even when the hammer is down and the trigger isn't reset.",
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"url": "https://www.minds.com/newsfeed/1200630798711336960",
"published": "2021-01-26T02:38:06+00:00",
"source": {
"content": "A takeaway from this past weekend's match was that I'm loosing time on target transitions, particularly while I'm moving, and taking too long to shoot when coming into position.\n\nClip one is a short move where I'm dropping the hammer on a moderately difficult partial target after stepping across the box. I'm trying to move aggressively, get my eyes focused on a precise spot on the target, drive the gun there, and break the shot as soon as the dot stabilizes sufficiently.\n\nClip two starts with transitions onto two open targets while backing up, a short move, coming into position on an easy target, then dropping the hammer on a tight partial. I'm prepping the trigger to the wall then letting up for the first three targets, prepping to the wall and pulling through for the first shot on the fourth, then prepping & pulling the dead trigger for the second shot. The Stock 2 that I'm using has a perceptible wall even when the hammer is down and the trigger isn't reset.",
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"content": "Reminder that Facebook has access to your private & group messages: <a href=\"https://archive.is/CERVn\" target=\"_blank\">https://archive.is/CERVn</a><br /><br />Very possible that people who attended the protest simply to exercise their First Amendment rights will get burned by this.<br /><br />Use <a href=\"https://telegram.org\" target=\"_blank\">https://telegram.org</a> and/or <a href=\"https://signal.org\" target=\"_blank\">https://signal.org</a>.",
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"url": "https://www.minds.com/newsfeed/1199382580935454720",
"published": "2021-01-22T15:58:10+00:00",
"source": {
"content": "Reminder that Facebook has access to your private & group messages: https://archive.is/CERVn\n\nVery possible that people who attended the protest simply to exercise their First Amendment rights will get burned by this.\n\nUse https://telegram.org and/or https://signal.org.",
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"content": "Targets here are a tuxedo and 8\" plate at 15 yards, a diagonal partial in the center at 5 yards, and a horizontal partial on the left at 5 yards.<br /><br />In the first clip, I'm shooting the plate at the beginning and tuxedo at the end but only prepping the trigger to the wall on the center target. Part of deficiency training is figuring out which shots you need to fire to meet the training objective in the run of a drill. I'm mostly concerned about the plate and tuxedo here, with the center target being more of a filler to test my transitions, so I generally didn't fire live rounds at it.<br /><br />In clip two, I'm firing all the rounds to check my hits on the center target. Big areas for improvement are shooting sooner on the center target and both coming to a stop faster and not standing up as much in the left shooting position.<br /><br />Clips three flips the initial direction of the move. There's too much of a delay between getting my left foot on the left fault line and firing the first shot at the tuxedo. Tough because of the lean. I could also transition to the center target faster, which will come from being more precise with my visual focus.<br /><br />In clips four and five, I want to try leaving the left position by stepping out with my right foot instead of leaning right and crossing with my left foot. This would get me moving faster, cutting time before the plate is available to shoot.",
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"url": "https://www.minds.com/newsfeed/1199344039837724672",
"published": "2021-01-22T13:25:00+00:00",
"source": {
"content": "Targets here are a tuxedo and 8\" plate at 15 yards, a diagonal partial in the center at 5 yards, and a horizontal partial on the left at 5 yards.\n\nIn the first clip, I'm shooting the plate at the beginning and tuxedo at the end but only prepping the trigger to the wall on the center target. Part of deficiency training is figuring out which shots you need to fire to meet the training objective in the run of a drill. I'm mostly concerned about the plate and tuxedo here, with the center target being more of a filler to test my transitions, so I generally didn't fire live rounds at it.\n\nIn clip two, I'm firing all the rounds to check my hits on the center target. Big areas for improvement are shooting sooner on the center target and both coming to a stop faster and not standing up as much in the left shooting position.\n\nClips three flips the initial direction of the move. There's too much of a delay between getting my left foot on the left fault line and firing the first shot at the tuxedo. Tough because of the lean. I could also transition to the center target faster, which will come from being more precise with my visual focus.\n\nIn clips four and five, I want to try leaving the left position by stepping out with my right foot instead of leaning right and crossing with my left foot. This would get me moving faster, cutting time before the plate is available to shoot.",
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