@manualdousuario@pfefferle Sure, you just need to include those two functions (as well as any cp_ - prefixed functions within them) in your functions.php file and then you should be able to use the shortcode in your pages and posts. If you only want it to include tags, the shortcode would look something like [notebookindex taxonomy=“post_tag” years=“true” count=“1”]
(Not sure if you mean something else by “default WP tags though, lmk if so!)
what do we have to do to make the #ActivityPub plugin attractive to more #WordPress users? We are currently at 4000+ active users on WordPress.org + the WordPress.com users.
I think what Stefan may be talking about is a kind of directory that lists available fediverse wordpress blog accounts, perhaps along with the profile description and gives you the option to follow them.
@pfefferle I would love to see ActivityPub get put into WordPress Core, and an interface developed capable of reading articles from other ActivityPub-enabled WordPress blogs.
One real headache we have right now with @wedistribute is that we want to output our articles as the Article type, but Mastodon doesn't support that. We can switch to Note, but that's more of a social status thing, rather than something specifically intended for publishing platforms and readers.
I think a picture of what this could ultimately might look like is:
Make ActivityPub a standard thing in every blog that's easy to turn on.
Add sections to the dashboard for user following and notifications of ActivityPub interactions.
Turn the like, bookmark, and reply functions into ActivityPub actions.
incorporate it in such a way that articles, likes, and responses can be seen within the WordPress dashboard.
The dashboard also has a section for following feeds. Basically, the WordPress.com reader, but ActivityPub-powered, and a standard part of WordPress.