From 8698a276f937cb1cd6f67f7f213e2ea438500d7e Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Brandon Mathis Date: Mon, 30 May 2011 00:30:16 -0400 Subject: Cleaned out public from repository, updated gitignore, added syntax highlighting tests, improved syntax highlighting and styling of pre blocks. Overriding dynamic gist styling. Added a plugin for pygments caching which should speed things up terrifically. added ender.js as a lightweight way of scripting the DOM, events, etc. Some general typography and semantic html improvements. --- public/index.html | 207 ------------------------------------------------------ 1 file changed, 207 deletions(-) delete mode 100644 public/index.html (limited to 'public/index.html') diff --git a/public/index.html b/public/index.html deleted file mode 100644 index 7b80d4e8..00000000 --- a/public/index.html +++ /dev/null @@ -1,207 +0,0 @@ - - - - - - - - - - Octopress - My Octopress Blog - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

My Octopress Blog

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Test of Typography

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In the past I’ve always designed my own business cards, printed them on expensive card stock, and hand-cut them with an X-Acto knife. My cards were way nicer than those my clients had gotten professionally printed with bubbly ink, no-bleed designs, and cheap paper. Though I put tremendous care into my cards, I never was happy with the design.

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Why Have Business Cards?

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I’m rarely asked for my business card except when I attend conferences, of which I attend one or two each year. As a freelance contractor, I leave work by walking twenty-five feet from my office to the couch. Many of the -people I work for I’ve never met in-person.

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When someone gives me their business card, I read it, pocket it, and eventually throw it out — sometimes before I remember to copy the information to my address book (sorry, just being honest). The reality is, with the ubiquity of the internet and with frictionless social networks like Twitter, I can connect with people immediately. So why have business cards?

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Continue reading »

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Test Post

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This is a test!

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Hello World! I'm Octopress!

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Octopress is a blogging framework designed for hackers, based on Jekyll the blog aware static site generator powering Github pages. -If you don’t know what Jekyll is, Jack Moffitt wrote a good summary:

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Jekyll is a static blog generator; it transforms a directory of input files into another directory of files suitable for a blog. The management of the blog is handled by standard, familiar tools like creating and renaming files, the text editor of your choice, and version control.

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Jack Moffitt Blogging with Git Emacs and Jekyll

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There’s no database to set up, and you get to use tools like Emacs, Vim, or TextMate to write your posts, not some lame in-browser text editor. Just write, generate, deploy, using the same tools and patterns you already use for your daily work.

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Read the wiki to learn more

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