I've Moved to Pure Blog!
Just a quick post to mention that I've now migrated this site to Pure Blog. Hopefully everything works...
Just a quick post to mention that I've now migrated this site to Pure Blog. Hopefully everything works...
I'd like to introduce you to my latest project, a simple blogging platform I've dubbed, Pure Blog.
I've been thinking about how this site may be able to live on after I'm gone. Maybe it could become a family heirloom?
My wife recently asked me at what point in my life was I the happiest. The answer surprised her.
I'm seeing a growing number of personal blogs that don't use upper case letters and for some reason it really irks me.
Sal talks about how Linux is going through somewhat of a revival at the moment, as well as some of his own thoughts on the whole Mac vs Windows vs Linux debacle, and I wanted to add some of my own thoughts.
In a web dominated by feeds and algorithms, Joan makes a strong case for blogging as a way to reclaim depth, ownership, and real thinking.
Two days ago I published a simple survey asking how you read the content I put out on this site. Here's the results of that survey.
I've yearned for a Blackberry form-factor for years, and now Clicks have made that wish come true. I had to pre-order one!
I'm trying to get an idea on how people consume the waffle I put out, it should only take 5 seconds to respond, and I'd be very grateful.
I've been using Firefox for over 20 years at this point, but after a stream of cock-ups, I'm thinking about moving on.
I didn't expect a parable about a fisherman to smack me in the face with such clarity, but here we are.
We're been living on our smallholding in Wales for 3 years now. Here's how things have been going this year.
I recently replaced my son's broken PC with a 2015 iMac from eBay. Here's how it went...
I was listening to the Waveform podcast on my way to work this morning and they were talking about cloud vs local computing, and I have thoughts...
Jan talks about how static site generators are far more complicated than WordPress, despite (ironically) their output being far simpler.
I've been working on adding support for comments over the last few months. On a static site, that's hard, but it's finally done.
Loren posts a response arguing that while self-hosting and local builds have their charm, the simplicity and zero-maintenance nature of services like Netlify often make them the more practical choice for small personal sites.
A look at why small, personal websites don’t need big-tech static hosting, and how a simple local build and rsync workflow gives you faster deploys, more control, and far fewer dependencies.