Extract microformats2-encoded data from a webpage.
There are a couple of ways you can use micromicro.cc:
You may point your browser at the website, enter a URL into the search form, and submit! You could also hack on the URL itself and throw something like this at your browser's URL bar:
https://micromicro.cc/search?url=https://sixtwothree.org
Lastly, if you're comfortable working on the command line, you can query the service directly using a tool like curl:
curl --header 'Accept: application/json' --silent 'https://micromicro.cc/search?url=https://sixtwothree.org'
…or Wget:
wget --header 'Accept: application/json' --quiet -O - 'https://micromicro.cc/search?url=https://sixtwothree.org'
The above command will return a JSON object with the results of the search.
You want to help make micromicro.cc better? Hell yeah! I like your enthusiasm. For more on how you can help, check out CONTRIBUTING.md.
If diving into Ruby isn't your thing, but you'd still like to support micromicro.cc, consider making a donation! Any amount—large or small—is greatly appreciated. As a token of my gratitude, I'll add your name to the Acknowledgments below.
micromicro.cc wouldn't exist without the hard work put in by everyone involved in the IndieWeb and microformats communities.
Text is set using Alfa Slab One and Gentium Book Basic which are provided by Google Fonts. Iconography is from Font Awesome's icon set.
micromicro.cc is written and maintained by Jason Garber.
micromicro.cc is freely available under the MIT License.