Blog Posts
Image Credit: Steve Francia / Eugen Rotchko (AGPL)
Threaded Mastodon Comments
Already before I set up this website using Hugo, I wanted to integrate Mastodon comments into the posts. I had already come across this implementation by Carl Schwan before, and it seems to work really well.
Integrating it was fairly straightforward, and is already explained in his post. I modified it a bit to remove the dialog box and include the core of those instructions in the comment section preamble. Aside from that, I was happy with the original setup as a starting point.
Image Credit: Roman Deckert / Wikimedia Commons (CC BY-SA 4.0)
Add Archives to Hugo
One thing that I felt was missing from Hugo, now that I’ve converted my site from WordPress, is the yearly archive feature. I mean, it’s essential! I have a whole 1, one, post from 2019, so I clearly need that.
Ok, so maybe not. But, it is nice to have in place for later nontheless. Searching online led me to this discussions thread on the Hugo forum.
There is no such feature it seems.
Image Credit: Hugo Logo by Steve Francia
Playing With Hugo
I got really tired of my WordPress website, so I decided it was time to rebuild the whole thing. Again. I have basically been using it as a static site. In part because I really don’t like using the Gutenberg editor that comes with WordPress.
I have tried static site generators before. In particular Jekyll, which I used for some project sites in my previous job. I have also used Sphinx a great deal for writing documentation.
Image Credit: Public Domain (CC0)
Making a New Website
I decided to begin writing again, feeling I needed a website for my thoughts and my projects. I’ve had a number of blogs before, and in the end I’ve stopped paying for their hosting and they’ve faded into internet history. But I love writing, and a blog is a nice outlet for when I don’t want to sit down and work on my larger writing projects.
This time I want to try a different approach.