inmytime.zone
gutenberg
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inmytime.zone | gutenberg | |
---|---|---|
1 | 106 | |
1 | 12,673 | |
- | 1.9% | |
0.0 | 8.3 | |
9 months ago | 4 days ago | |
Svelte | Rust | |
- | MIT License |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
inmytime.zone
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Ask HN: What are some tools / libraries you built yourself?
I made a few things for my personal use that are used often that I'm quite pleased with, in no particular order:
1. Wallpaper adhesive (https://github.com/jacobmischka/wallpaper-adhesive), an electron app I made ages ago when electron was still relatively new that creates spanned wallpapers for multimonitor setups based on your displays' resolutions. I use it every time I change my wallpapers, every month or so.
2. ics-merger (https://github.com/jacobmischka/ics-merger), a suite of tools including a webapp to merge separate calendar feeds together into a grouped feed, with possible subgroups. One can navigate through the subgroups, see event details, and subscribe to a merged feed, among other similar things. I made it for work, where it's used as the master departmental calendar feed.
3. Tea whistle (https://github.com/jacobmischka/tea-whistle), my second simple microcontroller project I made for my mother for her birthday because her teapot doesn't have a whistle so she kept accidentally boiling it over. It just polls the attached thermometer and beeps when the temperature is over boiling. She uses it every day and says she hasn't boiled it over once since!
4. inmytime.zone (https://github.com/jacobmischka/inmytime.zone), a simple webapp that allows you to create a URL that converts the time you give it into the local timezone of whoever is viewing it. It's effectively just a clone of https://everytimezone.com/ or one of the many other similar tools, but much less busy and without ads. I let the domain expire a few months ago, so it's not currently available, but I just renewed it so it should be again once the domain servers propagate.
5. Gym notebook (https://github.com/jacobmischka/gym_notebook), a flutter app I made when flutter was still quite new to track my workouts using firebase for storage. It's quite rough around the edges, fetches data from the network way more often than necessary, and needs a few bugfixes and could use a bit of work, but it's still good enough for me to use it 4-5 times per week.
gutenberg
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Replatforming from Gatsby to Zola!
So after shopping around a bit I found a simple, dependency-less static site generator called Zola. The lack of dependencies sounded very attractive after all the headaches trying to update my Gatsby modules. I wanted to give Zola a try and see what tradeoffs I would need to make coming form a React-based framework to this Rust-based generator.
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Ask HN: What's the simplest static website generator?
I think you're thinking about Zola: https://github.com/getzola/zola
But yes, if I were to recommend something, it'd be Zola given that there's just one executable that you need to run and there's absolutely no setup required.
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Ask HN: Looking for lightweight personal blogging platform
If I were to start again from scratch, I'd likely use Zola as SSG (https://www.getzola.org/)
- Zola – Single binary static site generator
- Zola
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Ask HN: So, static website generators and hosting in 2023/24. What's out there?
I've used Zola (https://github.com/getzola/zola) for a static project homepage a few years ago to showcase examples with a simple description and a wasm app embedded in the page, it worked perfectly for me and the docs was clear on how to use it. It was very easy to set up along with a GitHub action to automatically update the wasm binaries when needed. It is definitely a tool I keep in my mental toolbox as a good default.
- Zola: Your one-stop static site engine
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Gojekyll – 20x faster Go port of jekyll
I'm currently learning https://www.getzola.org/.
It's more manual than idy like but it's gonna be for a small personal and work website so I don't mind much.
It's super fast.
Doesn't seem to fit your use casr but still.
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The right way to build a dynamic personal website for a physics student?
(Note: that list is overwhelming; you don't need to go through it. Order by popularity and look at the top 3-5 at most. Hugo, Jekyll, Gatsby... Personally I'm using Zola [ https://www.getzola.org/ ] for a couple of sites, but that's just me.)
What are some alternatives?
gazpacho - 🥫 The simple, fast, and modern web scraping library
Hugo - The world’s fastest framework for building websites.
Zip Foundation - Effortless ZIP Handling in Swift
eleventy 🕚⚡️ - A simpler site generator. Transforms a directory of templates (of varying types) into HTML.
GoJS, a JavaScript Library for HTML Diagrams - JavaScript diagramming library for interactive flowcharts, org charts, design tools, planning tools, visual languages.
Nikola - A static website and blog generator
fselect - Find files with SQL-like queries
Rocket - A web framework for Rust.
Pion WebRTC - Pure Go implementation of the WebRTC API
Sapper - A lightweight web framework built on hyper, implemented in Rust language.
null - Nullable Go types that can be marshalled/unmarshalled to/from JSON.
hakyll - A static website compiler library in Haskell