Hey! Douglas, you found it!

It's about to be released

El martes, 4 de abril de 2017, 13:48:34 (UTC+2), Douglas Counts escribió:
>
> Daniel Rodríguez Rivero already has a tool to do this on GitHub called 
> Octowiki <https://github.com/OctoWiki/octowiki.github.io>.  I haven't 
> personally used his Octowiki tool to edit TWs on GitHub, but you can click 
> the GitHub link I just provided to give it a look.
>
> He also has a lot of TW stuff on his personal GitHub site too.
>
> -Doug
>
> On Saturday, March 18, 2017 at 2:30:23 PM UTC-5, Thomas Elmiger wrote:
>>
>> Hi all 
>>
>> Today I found some stuff via Twitter that could be of interest for 
>> publishing TW stuff from Github directly. 
>>
>> Smashing Magazine published a betaversion of their new website and they 
>> are going very innovative ways using netlify and Hugo amongst many other 
>> things: 
>>
>>
>> https://next.smashingmagazine.com/2017/03/a-little-surprise-is-waiting-for-you-here--meet-the-next-smashing-magazine/
>>  
>>
>> To understand netlify and it's philosophy I found the video here helpful: 
>> https://www.netlifycms.org/docs/intro/ 
>>
>> I could imagine using TW as a CMS instead of their react-based app but I 
>> have no idea how difficult it would be to adapt parts of their system to 
>> process tid files and wikitext instead of markdown … I found it very 
>> interesting nonetheless. 
>>
>> Have a nice weekend! 
>> Thomas 
>>
>> === Extract: 
>>
>> We are moving to a JAMstack: articles published directly to Netlify CDNs, 
>> with a custom shop based on an open-sourced headless E-Commerce GoCommerce 
>> and a job board that’s all just static HTML; content editing with Netlify’s 
>> new open-source, Git-Based CMS, real-time search powered by Algolia, full 
>> HTTP/2 support, and the whole website running as a progressive web app with 
>> a service worker in the background (thanks to the awesome Service Worker 
>> Toolbox library). Booo-yah! 
>>
>> How does it work? Quite simple, actually. Content is stored in Markdown 
>> files. HTML is pre-baked using the static site generator Hugo, combined 
>> with a modern asset pipeline built with Gulp and webpack, all based on the 
>> Victor Hugo boilerplate. 
>>
>> We’ve spiced it all up with a handful of fancy APIs, including ones by 
>> Stripe for payments, Algolia for search, Cloudinary for responsive images, 
>> and Netlify’s open-source APIs GoCommerce (a headless e-commerce API), 
>> GoTrue for authentication, and GoTell for our more than 150,000 comments. 
>>
>

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