Passionate generalist conquering the web one project at a time. Whether authoring libraries for node, JS, PHP, or Rust, I am always on the lookout for better solutions to common problems.
Location
USA
Work
Lead Developer & Co-founder at corpscrypt, CTO at REtech
Have you considered blua.blue? That way you can write on one platform and then publish to your blog (and dev.to, if you want) using either an API or a webhook. This gets you around the canonical issue: when using dev.to directly to write, search engines will treat your blog as duplicate content. With blua.blue you can set your content accordingly without having to leave it as draft. Additionally, the webhook approach allows you to generate static content rather than "pulling" from an API.
Passionate generalist conquering the web one project at a time. Whether authoring libraries for node, JS, PHP, or Rust, I am always on the lookout for better solutions to common problems.
Location
USA
Work
Lead Developer & Co-founder at corpscrypt, CTO at REtech
Miriam co-founded and built Strattic (acquired by Elementor) to bring an innovative and comprehensive approach to WordPress security and performance to the web at large.
There is a wordpress plugin that does that and likely more than one but the bigger your site is the more annoying that becomes. That being said, a static site is about as secure as you can get.
Miriam co-founded and built Strattic (acquired by Elementor) to bring an innovative and comprehensive approach to WordPress security and performance to the web at large.
Strattic has incremental builds so when updates are made to a larger site a full, potentially long build doesn't have to happen. And yeah, a static site reduces the attack surface to almost nothing on a site.
Miriam co-founded and built Strattic (acquired by Elementor) to bring an innovative and comprehensive approach to WordPress security and performance to the web at large.
Strattic is an end-to-end service which deploys and configures all parts of the infrastructure: isolated and containerized WordPress hosting environment; the static hosting area; fully configured CDN that is invalidated automatically when changes are deployed from the WP origin. Customer support is top notch too. Disclosure: I'm from Strattic.
Have you considered blua.blue? That way you can write on one platform and then publish to your blog (and dev.to, if you want) using either an API or a webhook. This gets you around the canonical issue: when using dev.to directly to write, search engines will treat your blog as duplicate content. With blua.blue you can set your content accordingly without having to leave it as draft. Additionally, the webhook approach allows you to generate static content rather than "pulling" from an API.
Your post is quite intriguing, but the blue.blue link seems to be broken, at least for me 😞
I apologize, fixed the link
Thank you :D
Nice … will give it a go. Thank you
FYI Strattic is a platform where people can use WP as usual and click a button to deploy the site as a static, headless version.
There is a wordpress plugin that does that and likely more than one but the bigger your site is the more annoying that becomes. That being said, a static site is about as secure as you can get.
wordpress.org/plugins/simply-static/
Strattic has incremental builds so when updates are made to a larger site a full, potentially long build doesn't have to happen. And yeah, a static site reduces the attack surface to almost nothing on a site.
Strattic is an end-to-end service which deploys and configures all parts of the infrastructure: isolated and containerized WordPress hosting environment; the static hosting area; fully configured CDN that is invalidated automatically when changes are deployed from the WP origin. Customer support is top notch too. Disclosure: I'm from Strattic.
heehee
Nice, but I would like to point out that your blog is mobile responsive.
Looks great on PC
I had build a community by inspired from dev.to, check it out here: mytopic.vn
My stack: nextjs, strapi.
Feel free to leave comment...
Excuse me, what does MVP here stand for?
It's Minimum Viable Product, the minimum amount of work you can put it to release something that is functional. Aka version 1 that is usable.
Oh yes, this is it. I know this term but forgot it, thanks a lot!
Meaning I can write and you can read for now. No other user actions like commenting, likes, newsletters and so on. Things you find on a normal blog
Most Valuable Product