enchantedsleeper: A blue icon with dark blue font reading, I don't obsess. I think. Intensely. (Tumblr icon)
[personal profile] enchantedsleeper posting in [community profile] smallweb
We’ve reached the first check-in point for Small Web September! How is everyone doing so far? Whether you’re just getting warmed up or are already ticking off goals (or maybe you just found this and want to join – welcome!), come and share your progress in the comments of this check-in.

The theme of this week’s check-in is links! Earlier this year, I came across Coy ([personal profile] osteophage)’s link compilation in praise of links, which led me down a rabbit hole of reading various essays about the importance of hyperlinking and being a good steward of the web. This includes not making your own site into an effective dead end, but sending people on to interesting destinations via links that you’ve included there.

I’ve always been a lover of curating cool webpages and sites, but it struck me that I wasn’t actually doing much of this on my own little website – now, it’s a personal fanworks archive, so you could argue that linking out to random pages is a bit out of step with the purpose of it. However, it broadened my thinking about where I could start adding more links: from archiving rec lists to linking out to gifts that other fans had made for me over the years.

So, the discussion starter for this check-in is: how do you link, and to what? Do you have a link hub or set of interesting finds? Would you like to do more with links?

As a bonus: share some of your favourite interesting links (this can be anything from thought-provoking essays to just cool stuff! They don't need to be explicitly small-web-themed, although that's great too).

And of course, let us know how your Small Web September project(s) is/are going!

As a reminder, this is the first of four ‘check-in’/comment points that will be published during the event – you can check out the schedule and dates of these posts over on the event intro. There’s no cut-off point for commenting on these, so you can add something at any time – you also don’t need to comment on them all or do them in order! The themes are a loose guide, but all discussion is welcome.

For the previous kick-off/goals post, check out: Small Web September: Kick-Off & Goals!

Date: 2025-09-08 01:56 am (UTC)
thatjustwontbreak: Hawkeye from M*A*S*H* reading in bed (Default)
From: [personal profile] thatjustwontbreak
Thanks for posting the menu links tutorial! I'd never heard of Jekyll before.

Date: 2025-09-08 02:06 am (UTC)
althea_valara: Icon captioned "Geek". (geek)
From: [personal profile] althea_valara
You're welcome! The beauty of Jekyll and other static site generators is that they allow you to strip out repetitive coding so that you only need to change that code in ONE place, rather than on all pages that will use the code. Jekyll is really nice in that it processes not just HTML files but other markup languages as well. I'm running it on a Windows 11 machine, which is NOT my favorite development setting (that would be some flavor of Linux) but it works fine for me. If you decide to go with Jekyll or another static site generator, I hope you find it as useful as I have!

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