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jayperry.works | ||
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rick.cogley.info
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| | | | | As they say, we "stand on the shoulders of giants", and this site is certainly no exception. Two previous iterations are still online here and here, having been built in Octopress 2 (with thanks to Paul Ser) and RapidWeaver, respectively. Ancient history, but my very first blog was on Radio Userland! Latest release This release represents a major upgrade to my process and site. After a couple of years of getting used to the basics of git, github and front-end development, I finally took steps to implement a workflow based on node and npm, using gulp. | |
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hjr265.me
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| | | | | Toph Help is built with Hugo - a static site generator. As you would expect with static sites, the pages are all generated ahead of time and hosted as plain HTML. You get all the benefits of static websites, but what about search? Client-side search is one way to work around this limitation of static websites. You build an array of objects describing all your pages on your website. You serve it to the client as JSON. | |
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www.tempertemper.net
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| | | | | tempertemper was build using Eleventy, Gulp, SCSS and carefully considered HTML. | |
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eran.sandler.co.il
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| | | It's time to move my blog to version 3. This time we are going back in time and into the future at the same time. Before we begin, here is a little history of my blog: Version 1 - Blogger Version 1 ran on Blogger - which was essentially a static site generation platform. It gave you an editor, you would write your posts and then it would generate your complete site in HTML and even allowed you to publish it on your own server by uploading the result via FTP. | ||