I design compilers, write mobile and web apps, make distributed apps, develop augmented reality and design. I write, paint and read. A lot. Huge Linux enthusiast.
Blog: https://nirlanka.com
I prefer Jekyll. I used to do a lot of coding with dynamic loading interactive content in blogs. I just gave up and went the minimalist route.
So now, it's just a simple GitHub Pages (Jekyll) website. I use prose.io and sometime even the GitHub interface itself to do content editing. I rarely push content with Git from my machine.
Take a look at my blog at nirlanka.com if it sounds any good :) I haven't added much content after restarting with Jekyll.
I design compilers, write mobile and web apps, make distributed apps, develop augmented reality and design. I write, paint and read. A lot. Huge Linux enthusiast.
Blog: https://nirlanka.com
I prefer Jekyll. I used to do a lot of coding with dynamic loading interactive content in blogs. I just gave up and went the minimalist route.
So now, it's just a simple GitHub Pages (Jekyll) website. I use prose.io and sometime even the GitHub interface itself to do content editing. I rarely push content with Git from my machine.
Take a look at my blog at nirlanka.com if it sounds any good :) I haven't added much content after restarting with Jekyll.
Cool! But I prefer JAMstack.
Sounds good :) With Jekyll alone, it's hard to make interactive websites. So your strategy makes sense.