diff --git a/src/content/posts/2024/june-2024.md b/src/content/posts/2024/june-2024.md index 1e6ef4e..8542a26 100644 --- a/src/content/posts/2024/june-2024.md +++ b/src/content/posts/2024/june-2024.md @@ -17,6 +17,7 @@ The exozyme server recently switched from LDAP to PAM for user management, so bo ## Static site hosting providers If you are thinking about hosting a static site, [in this post](https://www.1a-insec.net/blog/52-static-site-hosting-providers/) @iacore covers 3 static site hosting providers and the experience using them. + ## Executable toki pona @iacore was so bored that it made [an interpreter for a dialect of toki pona][toki] and wrote a simplified version of the game 2048 in that language. You will have to read [its source code](https://git.envs.net/iacore/toki_kama_sitelen) to understand the potency of this one. @@ -52,14 +53,14 @@ Note from @a: I have to admit that as a huge KDE fan, I've never been patient en Note from @a: I recently switched from Nextcloud to Syncthing for file sync and the difference has been night and day. @nvpie's post says Syncthing uses "magic" which is honestly a pretty accurate description (in reality, it sends to the IPv4 broadcast address to discover devices in the LAN and uses UPnP, UDP hole-punching or a relay server for NAT traversal because NAT is evil). Honestly, Nextcloud is an amazing piece of software, but its scope is just too wide and their developers are stretched thin. File sync should be their core feature, but instead there's one guy maintaining their Android file sync app, which often breaks with each update. They definitely need many people polishing on their main features rather than adding "AI integration" or dozens of other tangential features that no one will ever use. Nextcloud has the potential to be great, but in the meantime I'll just use Syncthing. -## https://daudix.codeberg.page/blog/rewriting-neocities-website/ +## Website Rewriting Adventures -TODO +@daudix made a cool blog post about [rewriting their neocities website](https://daudix.codeberg.page/blog/rewriting-neocities-website/), sharing their experience of the rewriting procees. + +Notes from @moksha: Neocities have given a space for people to come up with all sorts of cool and weird websites, So I recommend you to experiment with it. ## https://a.exozy.me/posts/end/ A group of friends play Gartic Phone with words, the constraint being, every article can only use the words that appeared in the previous article. Words are counted individually. [The result](https://a.exozy.me/posts/end/) might look like a summary of the previous article at first, but when you look closer, it's not. - -