How to deploy a static website for free in just 3 minutes straight from your Google Drive, using Fast.io
In this article, I'll show you how to deploy a static website for free in only 3 minutes, using a cloud storage service like Google Drive or Dropbox. And no - fast.io didn't pay me or freeCodeCamp to create this article. We don't have any relationshi...
sourcehut is a network of useful open source tools for software project maintainers and collaborators, including git repos, bug tracking, continuous integration, and mailing lists.
This guide explains how to host an own blog / website for free with about 1 hour of effort. It’s how I host this blog. There are certainly other options, and I’ve used some in the past. But this worked very well and with very little configuration effort. In this guide I use Gitlab as code host and Netlify to publish the website. I’m using the Hugo build system to build a static page.
This is the home of Webspaces, a new kind of website that uses HTML to create 3D worlds in addition to 2D pages.
Webspaces are made up of static HTML files - this webspace is hosted on GitHub Pages. If you want, you can fork it as a starting point for your own
WordPress Export to Markdown is a CLI tool (a Node script) that helps you migrate from WordPress to a static site generator (like Eleventy, for example)
Create a website in less than a minute with instant page loads. Manage your content in Apple Notes using your iPhone, iPad or Mac. Montaigne will syncronize your notes to the web.
How to use TiddlyWiki as a static website generator in 3 steps
In this tutorial, you will learn how to use TiddlyWiki as a static website generator. You'll learn how to install TiddlyWiki on your laptop, export your wiki to a static website, and host it on GitHub Pages for free.
One of my 2025 resolutions is doing things that don’t scale and doing them faster without
overthinking. The idea is to focus on doing more while worrying less about scalability and
sustainability in the things I do outside of work. With that in mind, I’ve been thinking for
a while about tracking some of my out-of-band activities on this blog. The goal is to:
List the things I do, books and articles I read, and talks I grok.
Add some commentary or quote something I liked from the content, verbatim, for posterity.
Not spam people who just want to read the regular articles.
Not turn into a content junkie, churning out slop I wouldn’t want to read myself.
This isn’t about getting more eyeballs on what I publish. It’s about tracking what I do so I
can look back at the end of the year and enjoy a nice little lull of accomplishment. Plus,
having a place to post stuff regularly nudges me to read more, explore more, and do more of
the things I actually want to do.