|
You are here |
stevenhicks.me | ||
| | | | |
jorge.olano.dev
|
|
| | | | | I set out to write a little static site generator, but why? | |
| | | | |
hjr265.me
|
|
| | | | | Yesterday I posted my 25th blog post for the #100DaysToOffload. That's 25% of the challenge. If it wasn't clear by the post Showing GitHub Stars With Static Site Generator Hugo, I use Hugo for this site. All this time, I was manually adding a footnote to each of the blog posts: This post is {n}th of my #100DaysToOffload challenge. Want to get involved? Find out more at 100daystooffload.com. Figuring out what {n} is for each blog post wasn't fun. | |
| | | | |
duerrenberger.dev
|
|
| | | | | As of November 5th, 2025, Material for MkDocs is now in maintenance mode. At the same time a new static site generator has been brought to live: Zensical | |
| | | | |
labanskoller.se
|
|
| | | Inpired by Hackeriet's blog where Alexander Kjäll use to post CTF write-ups, I've decided to create a personal one for myself. Focus will be on IT security. Hackeriet's blog is powered by Jekyll which is a static site generator written in Ruby. See their post Creating a fast blog for how they set up their blog. I have decided to try another static site generator called Hugo, which is written in Go. | ||