I’m looking to spin up a new personal website, after leaving my current one languishing for 5 years without an update. I built that one mainly to facilitate my transition from WordPress development to modern SPA engineering, but it’s kind of onerous to update since it’s not backed by a CMS, and the codebase is… well, it’s a first-attempt SPA built by a WordPress dev. :)

The new one will serve a similar purpose (I’m looking to transition into gamedev), but the challenges are a little different this time around — all of my work over the past five years has been on internal or otherwise not publicly available software, so I can’t really show a thumbnail collage of my recent projects. All of my personal, gamedev-related projects are in various states of unreleased or unfinished WIP, and they’re all individual features or systems intended to slot into a bigger project that doesn’t exist yet, so I also can’t really throw any playable demos up on itch.io or whatever.

So I’m thinking that the best way to showcase my knowledge/skillset this time around would be with a blog, where I can talk about some of the nascent projects I’ve been working on, the challenges I’ve encountered and how I’m approaching them, etc.

However, it’s been a long time since I’ve published an actual website, so to get started I’m trying to get acquainted with what the ecosystem looks like for this sort of thing in 2023. All of my domains are currently at Google, so I’m thinking about giving SquareSpace a try (since they’ve recently purchased Google Domains).

The pros for SquareSpace, as I see it currently:

  • Pretty painless initial setup (besides agonizing over which template to use)
  • Some flexibility to grow into it and customize to my needs over time, though I haven’t deeply investigated this yet
  • Zero time spent thinking about hosting or server-side whatever

The big con:

  • Totally closed-source, walled-garden type of ecosystem, so if I wanted to migrate eventually I would need to mostly start over from scratch.

I’m tempted to spin up something fully custom, so I can choose my own tech stack from top to bottom. But the major downside of that is that I would need to spin up something fully custom and decide on a tech stack from top to bottom. As fun as that sounds, I kind of doubt it would be the most valuable use of my time right now. It would also force me to think about things like hosting and server configuration which I have no enthusiasm for. I’d really like to get something off the ground within the next few days, so I can start writing content this week.

Any recommendations? Options I haven’t considered? Good or bad experiences to share? Any success/horror stories about SquareSpace in particular?

  • dannymcgeeOP
    link
    fedilink
    English
    arrow-up
    1
    ·
    edit-2
    1 year ago

    That’s definitely an option that’s on the table! But it comes with more questions, like:

    • Which static-generation framework / templating language to use?
    • How customizable are these things? I need support for YouTube embedding and syntax-highlighted code snippets at a minimum — preferably, I’d like to be able to customize the syntax highlighting, and I’ll likely need some less common “block” types as well, like math notation

    I would kind of like to support comments as well, but for that it might be better to just post the blog links to Lemmy and link to the corresponding Lemmy thread at the end of the post.

    • Jose J. Fernández
      link
      fedilink
      English
      arrow-up
      6
      ·
      1 year ago

      I think if you can achieve what you want with HTML, CSS and JavaScript by yourself, any static site generator will allow you to do it. They just automate filling in HTML templates, which you can create yourself too.

      I know Hugo. It’s simple and, as I mentioned, I do by myself what I don’t find out there.

    • canpolat
      link
      fedilink
      English
      arrow-up
      2
      ·
      1 year ago

      I believe Jekyll is the most popular of them and Github supports it natively. They even have documentation on how to set it up: About Github Pages and Jekyll. This page touches syntax highlighting. It also supports additional plug-ins.