@NanouuSymeon Yes! A simple static generated site, hosted (for free) via Netlify, with a cheap domain name (~$15/yr). Totally worth it! https://t.co/TKYiX5swOY
@FrankLesniak Is this because meetings change last minute? When that would happen I found the mobile notifications were useless. Now I'm mostly at my desk so I just have Outlook + a script that sends an alert to my Ulanzi pixel clock on my desk.
Always fun when I spot another punk in tech, but it shouldn't be surprising. We love to build community and the DIY ethic. Why do I write FOSS libraries/tools? Because your success doesn't negate mine. See you in the pit!
THIS! Writing and hosting a blog/docs site can be something you do for free. I'm in the process of writing a note on the different generators I've used, but the tldr is the move to services that host these for free (@Netlify, @Vercel, @Github Pages) is a no brainer.
Most people would be better off with a simple static site than Wordpress.
Static sites are faster, cheaper, and easier to edit. And because you own your content in plain text you can more easily switch site generator or host. You're not held hostage.
@mitchellh A developers OS is just window dressing. We have access to run and build on all the OS's (e.g., SSH, GH, etc.). I've used all 3. As a person who's managed large Windows fleets, you gotta dogfood it.
@SamErde@JamesBru I've published under the free account for all my personal stuff (5 sites) and I've never hit a limit. The open source stuff will be useful for having a team work on stuff together.
@SamErde@JamesBru I haven't but I should. I'll see if I can slap something together this evening. Also, if you are working as an open source org you can get netlify for free.