I'm a web sysop and support engineer. My skills are mainly in back-end: Java, Linux, Python, PostgreSQL, Git, and GitLab. Currently I'm learning front-end skills: JavaScript, and Ruby.
There are some great ideas in these comments for organising projects on your workstation and in source control.
For organising an online portfolio I think one of the simplest ways is to have a small static web site where you can group your creations, with links to where they live.
So that way, if you have stuff on Netlify, and Codepen, and GitHub Pages, or a Scratch project, or some music you coded in Sonic Pi with the code as a Gist and the demo on SoundCloud, you can tie it all together under a project in your portfolio.
If your are a sysadmin who develops on the side, it's also nice to show off your sysadmin toolbox - some dotfiles projects with links to blog posts about them.
At least, that is where I'm aiming to go. I'm pretty motivated after reading everyone's comments here.
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There are some great ideas in these comments for organising projects on your workstation and in source control.
For organising an online portfolio I think one of the simplest ways is to have a small static web site where you can group your creations, with links to where they live.
So that way, if you have stuff on Netlify, and Codepen, and GitHub Pages, or a Scratch project, or some music you coded in Sonic Pi with the code as a Gist and the demo on SoundCloud, you can tie it all together under a project in your portfolio.
If your are a sysadmin who develops on the side, it's also nice to show off your sysadmin toolbox - some dotfiles projects with links to blog posts about them.
At least, that is where I'm aiming to go. I'm pretty motivated after reading everyone's comments here.