Updated
11 months
ago.
4 hacker ♥️.
2 followers.
5 small projects in one hack week
I always try to take on something bigger than I can complete in Hackweek, and then wallow in my frustrations for weeks after. This time I'm doing something different: one small project every day; 5 accomplishments; 5 successes. I invite you to join me. Post your mini-projects in the comments.
Goal for this Hackweek
- Finish something small
- Finish something small
- Finish something small
- Finish something small
- Start something big ;-)
Looking for hackers with the skills:
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This project is part of:
Hack Week 23
Activity
Comments
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11 months ago by bear454 | Reply
- I updated https://suse-enceladus.github.io/ to being generated via Lektor & Github Actions, instead of static HTML.
- Continued refinement of the suse-enceladus site. I learned some new optimization techniques, experimented with removing some content, learned how to optimize webp images, and built a responsive navbar from scratch! I'll be writing up some documentation this evening, and then handing the site back to my team :D
- Taking what I learned in days 1 & 2, I'm leveraging that to do a bigger web refresh. I was able to create renovate the LinuxFest Northwest site (https://lfnw.org) in a similar fashion. The basic page structure is complete today. Tomorrow I will work on extending the flow blocks to cover all necessary components, and creating a template that can be used for future events.
- Finished up the LFNW site renovation, sent it out for peer review. I learned how to implement maps with leaflet, and did some heavy lifting with CSS grids & flexboxes, as well as learning to do masking with SVGs. I'm really happy about how it turned out, and while it's not as slim as the SUSE-Enceladus site, the new revision is about a third the download size of the current page, and much more responsive.
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11 months ago by bear454 | Reply
Friday got swallowed up with work, but I was determined to squeeze in just a bit more hacking, and as a result, I built a home Minecraft multi-world server; it's running Leap, and using podman pods (first time using podman). All the Minecraft services are in user space. P.S. It's on Atari hardware which just feels fun.
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