Hi all,
This is just a short reminder about our biweekly Grafoscopio community
workshops about IndieWeb and pocket infrastructures (in Spanish). You
can find more information about them on:
[1]
https://mutabit.com/repos.fossil/indieweb/doc/trunk/docs/es/index.html#talleres
It has been really nice to see how workshops, prose and code advance
intertwined and feedback each other in this community experience made on
a voluntary basis. In the "behind scenes" links below you can see how
the writing advances at a pretty good pace.
By a happy coincidence, that I think is more a reflection of the spirit
of our times, we, at the local community, started to develop a so called
decoupled/headless CMS, that suits our writing and publishing workflows
better that overcomplicated CMS (like WordPress) and after that I found
that there is a complete movement around them, that includes static
generators[1] and JAMStack. Our approach aligns with them in some places
and in others I think we are more agile and minimalist. As usual, I
create an interactive Grafoscopio outline/notebook and a Domain Specific
Language that explores the problem and creates some prototypes (see
screenshot below). We have biweekly community workshops[2a], where we
learn how to build, update and modify our static site and the
technologies behind and the companion documentation site[2] is an
exampler and explainer of what can be done using the Brea[3] minimalist
CMS under construction:
[1] https://jamstack.org/generators/
[2] https://mutabit.com/repos.fossil/indieweb/
[2a]
https://mutabit.com/repos.fossil/indieweb/doc/trunk/docs/es/index.html#talleres
[3] https://mutabit.com/repos.fossil/brea/
As usual, I would like to thanks the remote community that makes this
local experience possible, and also I would like to thank ESUG for their
key support to this initiative.
Cheers,
Offray
Ps: here are the "behind scenes" links
Hi all,
This is just a short reminder about our biweekly Grafoscopio community
workshops about IndieWeb and pocket infrastructures (in Spanish). You
can find more information about them on:
[1]
https://mutabit.com/repos.fossil/indieweb/doc/trunk/docs/es/index.html#talleres
It has been really nice to see how workshops, prose and code advance
intertwined and feedback each other in this community experience made on
a voluntary basis. In the "behind scenes" links below you can see how
the writing advances at a pretty good pace.
By a happy coincidence, that I think is more a reflection of the spirit
of our times, we, at the local community, started to develop a so called
decoupled/headless CMS, that suits our writing and publishing workflows
better that overcomplicated CMS (like WordPress) and after that I found
that there is a complete movement around them, that includes static
generators[1] and JAMStack. Our approach aligns with them in some places
and in others I think we are more agile and minimalist. As usual, I
create an interactive Grafoscopio outline/notebook and a Domain Specific
Language that explores the problem and creates some prototypes (see
screenshot below). We have biweekly community workshops[2a], where we
learn how to build, update and modify our static site and the
technologies behind and the companion documentation site[2] is an
exampler and explainer of what can be done using the Brea[3] minimalist
CMS under construction:
[1] https://jamstack.org/generators/
[2] https://mutabit.com/repos.fossil/indieweb/
[2a]
https://mutabit.com/repos.fossil/indieweb/doc/trunk/docs/es/index.html#talleres
[3] https://mutabit.com/repos.fossil/brea/
As usual, I would like to thanks the remote community that makes this
local experience possible, and also I would like to thank ESUG for their
key support to this initiative.
Cheers,
Offray
Ps: here are the "behind scenes" links
* https://mutabit.com/repos.fossil/indieweb/timeline
* https://mutabit.com/repos.fossil/indieweb/tree?ci=tip&name=docs/es&type=tree
* https://code.tupale.co/Offray/Brea
* https://mutabit.com/repos.fossil/brea/