aivi

piano & day dreams

music composer 🎹🌊

half of the band @aivisura

founder of @infloresce

vietnamese, non-binary, mom 💙


Lately, I’ve been working on moving my websites (all 5 of them) off of Wix and over to Siteground.

Wix is really fun to use and has been a great creative outlet for me, but I decided to switch to Siteground for ethical, environmental, and financial reasons.

Moving has required me to rebuild all of my sites on WordPress and it’s been a lot of work. I have some CSS experience so the coding part hasn’t been too bad, but it’s been a whole thing to learn a new tool and the ecosystem surrounding it.

So far, I’ve managed to rebuild the new Infloresce Records website. It’s not 100% aesthetic yet but it works! I’m pretty happy with it.

Definitely something that I’m learning from this experience is, for all my obsession with formatting, I enjoy the whole creation process a lot better starting from the ground up:

  1. Function first 🪐
  2. Content second 🌙
  3. Aesthetics and formatting last


Last weekend’s @Infloresce & Friends featured an opening set of piano-centric and classical-inspired music, curated by @Promtastik.

It was a wonderful experience and inspired me to listen to some of my favorite orchestral pieces again. 💕

Several years ago, I fell in love with Danzón No. 2 by Arturo Márquez after seeing a video of Alondra de la Parra conducting a rehearsal of it. (She is incredibly charming and I recommend watching videos of her conducting to feel inspired!)

Composed in 1994, Danzón No. 2 is one of the most popular contemporary classical pieces from Mexico.

Soaring melodies, catchy rhythms, exciting tempo changes – it’s completely enthralling from start to finish.



mcc
@mcc

Geocities HTML Chat has been forgotten by the world. It is possible I am the only one who remembers it. I only half remember it. It was my first Internet community.

Here is what I remember.

Background

  1. Geocities was a formative website for the older millennials who are just barely old enough to remember when the "web browser" was introduced, but not old enough to be adults when it happened. It wasn't a very good site.

    Geocities was the first, or at least biggest, of the "free web hosts" of the early Internet. Anyone could sign up for a pittance-small (5 megabytes? 10 megabytes?) web directory, and FTP up their HTML and GIF files and Geocities would host it raw and unaltered. Geocities sites had the ugliest URLs on the Internet. Each URL consisted of the user's "city", followed by a four-digit number Geocities assigned. The "cities" were broad categories indicating the type of content your site would contain, like "SiliconValley" for computers, "WestHollywood" for LGBT topics, or… "Tokyo"¹. The categories seemed ill-thought-out and lumpy. The existence of "NapaValley" seemed to indicate they believed there would be roughly as many sites about wine as about all computer-related subjects combined.

    These "cities" seem to have been part of a very vague desire to conceptualize Geocities' very basic service (HTTP file hosting) as in fact a collection of communities. The people who made Geocities had some kind of sense the social web would, or could, someday exist. They could smell it, they could feel the heat of the thing in the room with them. They just had no idea what it would look like. Leaping from flat file hosting to something that looks like "social" "media" requires interactivity, and that was just not really available in webtech at that early point. Cross-page communities were things stitched in by hand (like the "webrings" the Mastodon crowd loves so much; these littered Geocities and invariably consisted of 50% dead links). "CGI-BIN" existed, on some sites (not Geocities), but all it could do was generate new flat files, so people largely only used CGI for the most basic purposes: "Guestbooks" where you could leave your name and a bit of text which would be appended to the HTML of the guestbook page; mindlessly simple "counters" which would generate on each load a GIF containing a number one higher than the last one loaded, showing how many people had visited that page.

    If you're old enough to remember this time, you're kind of nodding off at this point in the post. You know all this. But you probably did not know about Geocities HTML Chat, and if you knew it existed and what it was you probably would be actually shocked. I'm not sure you're even going to believe me this was a real thing that existed.