> But the pingback was more about making your blog post a comment on someone's post.
That's what "webmentions" do.
> That way my feed was a mix of the discussions I'm having with others as well as my own stuff.
Here's something I like: everything you say is part of a public discussion, so you're talking alone, also comments have about the same weight as standalone posts, also outsiders can join the discussion, it isn't restrict to your current circle of friends.
What you are describing has existed for years and we called it Usenet. Or a forum. Or a mailing list. I can accept that "social networking" is a bad term, but in popular usage it encompasses the "personal feed" almost by definition.
> I can accept that "social networking" is a bad term, but in popular usage it encompasses the "personal feed" almost by definition.
Yes, but just because no one has tried to create a different social network. That's why I made my initial comment in the first place.
> What you are describing has existed for years and we called it Usenet. Or a forum. Or a mailing list.
I don't know about Usenet, but forums and mailing lists are generally oriented to narrow topics, it is not something in which you'll see your school friends or people with multiple areas to discuss varied subjects.
That's what "webmentions" do.
> That way my feed was a mix of the discussions I'm having with others as well as my own stuff.
Here's something I like: everything you say is part of a public discussion, so you're talking alone, also comments have about the same weight as standalone posts, also outsiders can join the discussion, it isn't restrict to your current circle of friends.