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Ask Lemmy
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Edit: I know how to put a link and a description, it's square brackets and parentheses, plus the link and the text. It's always the eight try that's the right one.
Yep, I mainly used Deviantart as a quick way to move photos from home to external computers to quickly show them to others.
I have used Deviantart for 20 years or so, but this year, I got pissed off for the last time, it is just so slow, it takes ages to browse a gallery.
So I spent a few days building a menu in HTML and CSS that has a few simple effects, and importantly is easy to update, I then uploaded that to a personal webhost, and started creating HTML galleries with digiKam, uploading them there, and updating the menu.
I want to preserve my privacy, so I won't link the site here, but if others are interested, I should be able to share the code of the menu system.
So...Geocities?
I doubt that I could have built a menu like I did in Geocities or even in CSS at that time.
Text's good. But I like a good, carefully-chosen image now and then. Sets the mood, illustrates some aspect of the topic, adds some flavor.
This and put it on neocities.
Hugo as a static page generator. GitHub pages for free hosting.
Is it free because of ads or something?
Its free because the files are already public via GitHub, so it doesn't cost GithHub much extra money to run.
Anyone can go to a public GitHub repo and see the files, right? So if the GitHub Pages website's files are in a public repo, all GitHub has to do is slap a domain name in front of those files.
Using Jekyll for static site generation and throwing it on GitHub Pages is what I've been doing for a few years.
Netlify is a nice alternative to GH Pages for hosting. Cloudflare Pages also exists but never tried it before.
Definitely Jekyll or Hugo on GitHub pages.
I use Ghost CMS because I wanted an easier mobile editing experience, it is also very low maintenance in its container form.
This won't be helpful, but reading this thread makes me think about my angelfire website from, idk, 1998? I had that and a HTML 4.0 bible. Good times. Deleted times 😑
I read that the fediverse equivalent to bandcamp is using a webring, maybe there is or will be a fediverse hosting ecosystem?
I'll add a quick point that might not be obvious. There are actually three things you'll need to consider: a domain name, hosting, and your content.
TL;DR: for a simple blog-ish site, I would recommend DreamHost shared starter plan (USD$84 per year after promotions end, includes a custom domain name) and use GetSimple as the basis for your site (which can be installed from the DreamHost panel). Email costs a little more though.
A domain name typically costs less than USD$20 per year, with some top-level domains (like .online or .xyz) being only a few dollars per year. There are lots of ways to set up a site with a free subdomain (yoursite.hostingprovider.com) if cost is a barrier, but buying your own makes for a shorter and cleaner website name, and you can take it with you if you want to change your hosting. Most companies that offer domain registration will offer hosting as well, and they sometimes bundle them (a low-cost plan on DreamHost includes one domain name for free). Owning your own domain name usually means you have more options for setting up email as well.
For hosting, there are lots of free and easy options that others have mentioned (github pages, etc). Typical low-cost plans from many dedicated hosting companies are around USD$5 per month. Paying for hosting gives you more options for what you can do with your site--if you want WordPress, for example, github pages won't be a hosting option. I've had a great experience with DreamHost, and BlueHost is a solid option as well.
Finally, generating the pages is its own challenge, and there are some wildly different ways of doing it. As others mentioned, I would avoid anything with a database if you can (WordPress being the big one). If you want a blog-ish type of site, I recommend GetSimple (I've had a few non-technical friends who were very happy with it). Or you can use a static site generator, though the workflow for many of those is often not as easy in my experience. Or if you're feeling plucky, you can write the pages in HTML, CSS, and JS, and/or throw some PHP in there. I use skeleton for my site.
Is a hosted site like Medium or WordPress an option?
wordpress is only low maintenance if you don’t care about or are ignorant to security
Doesn't hosted WordPress auto-update at this point?
zero days and all sorts of things don’t get fixed in updates… the fact that the software with the security issue has access to write to disk in a manner that can be executed is also a huge problem
Yeah! Although, from personal experience reading blogs on Medium, it wouldn't be my first choice simply due to its pushiness to sign up/subscribe to some of the blogs there.
I never read from any one source there consistently enough to remember if that's a general platform element or only partnered/select blog element, and I feel like others unfamiliar with it may feel similar.
That's totally understandable.
I self hosted a blog for a while. Tweaking it was fun, but eventually the novelty wore off. If I ever do it again, I'd probably use something hosted so I spend more time on the content instead of the back end.
You can enable static website hosting on an AWS S3 bucket as long as it's a simple page. At that point it's paid for by the click, if you get enough visits to exceed the free tier.
Another vote for a static site generator. I use Publii on Cloudflare Pages. I switched from Wordpress, and I find the maintenance significantly easier.
If you are looking for true low maintenance, avoid needing a DB. So I'd stay away from the WordPress suggestions. Not to mention keeping WordPress CVE free is often a full time job and the opposite of low maintenance.
I'd use one of the many tools out there that takes Markdown and coverts it to HTML, stick that in a basic CI job on Gitlab or Github to build out my HTML and I just write markdown.
Once that's in place how I would decide if I wanted a custom domain.
If I don't need a custom domain, then I can just augment the pipeline to publish to Gitlab/Github pages.
If I want a custom domain then it depends on budget and expected traffic, but I'd likely just put it on an ECS container or in an S3 bucket and shove cloudfront in front of it, because if it's small enough it will likely qualify for free tier AWS. If it's too big for free tier then I'd stick with a container but likely either put it on a cheap cloud node with Apache and letsencrypt and one of the smaller providers like Linode/DO/Vultr
ECS would also incur either Fargate or ECS, and S3 + Cloudfront, while robust is definitely not very simple. I’m not saying it is hard, just complex.
Your Github / Gitlab Pages solution is a great idea… even if you want to use custom domain. They both support it.
Yeah fair, I think of them as simple.. Guess I've been in the trenches too long 😂
Appreciate the breakdown! Ngl though you lost me at the end with the ECS container/S3 bucket stuff (as in, I dunno what ECS is, I think S3 bucket may be something akin to a VPS? but yeah), but that may just be an indicator it's much more than I'd probably need/want for my interests.
Ah sorry, I'm an SRE/Devops guy professionally so I forget that containers are still way out of folks experience range 😅
Could use blogspot
Or WordPress
Depends on what you need it to do. If you’re looking for something simple for text / minimal images, I'd recommend looking into Static Site Generators like Hugo and using something like GitHub Pages to host.
SSGs are fairly low-maintenance once the set up is out of the way.
Depends™
If I don't expect many changes I would do a simple HTML page. Maybe with PHP to include the layouts on multiple sites.
If I or a relative should be able to edit it now and then I would use WordPress without any plugins. Set it to auto-update and call it a day.
I use Netlify. I'm not a technical person.
When you have it built, throw it in a container and run it in Lambda. You'll be able to run it anywhere if you package as a container.
that feels WAY over complicated
Compared to what?
Sticking to AWS, you can host static content direct in S3. Just need a bucket and DNS CNAME.