diff --git a/_cache/webmentions.json b/_cache/webmentions.json index c5f27ca..69264d1 100644 --- a/_cache/webmentions.json +++ b/_cache/webmentions.json @@ -1,5 +1,5 @@ { - "lastFetched": "2025-04-20T15:40:47.300Z", + "lastFetched": "2025-04-20T15:44:11.871Z", "children": [ { "type": "entry", diff --git a/content/blog/2025-04-20-gitea.md b/content/blog/2025-04-20-gitea.md index 661c299..38e9f91 100644 --- a/content/blog/2025-04-20-gitea.md +++ b/content/blog/2025-04-20-gitea.md @@ -5,7 +5,7 @@ permalink: /gitea/ tags: - tinkering --- -This site is running in 11ty and is built locally, after which the live site (which gets built into a folder called \_site) is pushed to my Reclaim Hosting account, where it's served up as kfitz.info. As an intermediate step, I have been pushing the code and content that builds the site to a GitHub repository, and then the \_site folder to another GitHub repository, kfitz-site, mostly for preservation/backup purposes; if something happens to the server or to my local repo, there's another version-controlled pile of code out there from which things can be rebuilt. (Technically, I pull kfitz-site from GitHub to Reclaim. Similarly, presentations.kfitz.info, which runs in revealjs, is built locally, pushed to GitHub, and then pulled to Reclaim.) +This site is running in 11ty and is built locally, after which the live site (which gets built into the \_site folder) is pushed to my Reclaim Hosting account, where it's served up as kfitz.info. As an intermediate step, I have been pushing the code and content that builds the site to a GitHub repository, and then the \_site folder to another GitHub repository, kfitz-site, mostly for preservation/backup purposes; if something happens to the server or to my local repo, there's another version-controlled pile of code out there from which things can be rebuilt. (Technically, I pull kfitz-site from GitHub to Reclaim. Similarly, presentations.kfitz.info, which runs in revealjs, is built locally, pushed to GitHub, and then pulled to Reclaim.) I've had in my head for a while, though, that GitHub is in and of itself a point of failure, partially because of its ownership structure. On top of which, I haven't been delighted knowing that everything I push there is part of the greater Copilot feeding frenzy.