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jeff.glass
| | notes.rolandcrosby.com
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| | vuyisile.com
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| | The article provides a guide on how to host a static website using AWS services including Amazon S3, Route 53, CloudFront and AWS Certificate Manager. It details how to create an S3 bucket, set it ...
| | wweb.dev
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| | In this part we're going to add CloudFront to deliver our website content with low latency to the user. Afterward, we'll add a domain with HTTPs for our website...
| | nikdoof.com
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| Recently i've spotted quite an up-tick in discussions about blogging and content generation in this quickly evolving federated and user hosted future. Blogs are "cool" again, tried and tested RSS is the tool to subscribe with, and OPML is back as the method to share your feeds. For me, RSS never really went anywhere. People like to call it dead after Google Reader shut down, if anything it unified the remaining users into generating new tools and applications to consume RSS. On the website front, RSS is still there just not front and centre, and most large websites still publish their RSS feeds. I've personally been using Miniflux as my primary RSS feed consumption tool for a couple of years now, its incredibly easy to self host with only Postgresql as a dependency, and it has a lot of tools built in to manage even difficult RSS feeds that mangle the output.