quicksite
markdown-blog
quicksite | markdown-blog | |
---|---|---|
1 | 7 | |
- | 88 | |
- | - | |
- | 5.4 | |
- | about 2 months ago | |
PHP | ||
- | 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.
quicksite
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I moved this blog from Medium
If you want a blog of your own, no need to get a VPS or anything. You can just fork my repo here:
https://gitlab.com/stavros/quicksite
You can even edit your posts right on GitLab, so you don't need knowledge of git.
markdown-blog
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Start a Fucking Blog
I still have a Blogger site just because I am not sure how to export all the data without days of work to copy the content, images and reformat everything to go to something like WordPress or markdown [0].
[0]: https://github.com/Cristy94/markdown-blog
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Show HN: Markdown as Web Page/Site
I did something similar, but for adding a blog system to a server running PHP: https://github.com/Cristy94/markdown-blog
The idea is that having it server-side allows for the page to be cached by a CDN (e.g. CloudFlare), so you end up serving static HTML, with better performance and SEO than JS-compiled markdown.
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How do you store your notes?
I store them on my server, some of them that I think can help others I put on my webserver with https://github.com/Cristy94/markdown-blog
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I moved this blog from Medium
If you host anywhere a LAMP stack: I built a very basic markdown-based in PHP: https://github.com/Cristy94/markdown-blog
The idea is that Apache/PHP handle the loading/displaying of markdown files form a directory, so to add a new post you just create a new markdown file. It's very basic, but it's easy to customize with a bit of HTML/CSS/PHP.
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Ask HN: Hosted solutions to run a personal blog?
If you want something really basic, I created a tiny PHP blog that simply renders your Markdown files: https://github.com/Cristy94/markdown-blog
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Ask HN: What are some tools / libraries you built yourself?
Working on building userTrack[0] I always encountered the need of various auxiliary tools. I had to implement a custom deploy system to build different variants of the product, to create a licensing server (to create and verify license codes and to allow downloads for valid license owners), a blogging platform[1], some JS snippets [2], etc.
Most of the times, the libraries/tools that you build yourself are either to connect and interact with a specific external service OR to have a simpler (only the features you need) or cheaper version of an existing product/platform.
[0]: https://www.usertrack.net/
[1]: https://github.com/Cristy94/markdown-blog
[2]: https://github.com/Cristy94/dynamic-listener
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Around the Web 〜 RSS as a Facebook Alternative
What a coincidence, I just added RSS support for my open-source "blog" scaffold: https://github.com/Cristy94/markdown-blog#changelog
What are some alternatives?
snipp.in - Fast, Light-weight, Notes, Snippet manager and code editor directly inside your browser
awesome-selfhosted - A list of Free Software network services and web applications which can be hosted on your own servers
GoJS, a JavaScript Library for HTML Diagrams - JavaScript diagramming library for interactive flowcharts, org charts, design tools, planning tools, visual languages.
yadm - Yet Another Dotfiles Manager
gutenberg - A fast static site generator in a single binary with everything built-in. https://www.getzola.org
nitter - Alternative Twitter front-end
morss - Get full text RSS feeds
RSS-Bridge - The RSS feed for websites missing it
vaku - vaku extends the vault api & cli
Tabula - Extract tables from PDF files
tera - A template engine for Rust based on Jinja2/Django
gazpacho - 🥫 The simple, fast, and modern web scraping library