From 8698a276f937cb1cd6f67f7f213e2ea438500d7e Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001
From: Brandon Mathis <brandon@imathis.com>
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.

---
 source/_posts/2009-11-13-hello-world.markdown | 6 +++---
 1 file changed, 3 insertions(+), 3 deletions(-)

(limited to 'source/_posts/2009-11-13-hello-world.markdown')

diff --git a/source/_posts/2009-11-13-hello-world.markdown b/source/_posts/2009-11-13-hello-world.markdown
index 011368d3..af719856 100644
--- a/source/_posts/2009-11-13-hello-world.markdown
+++ b/source/_posts/2009-11-13-hello-world.markdown
@@ -7,9 +7,9 @@ updated: March 10th, 2010
 **Octopress is a blogging framework designed for hackers**, based on [Jekyll](http://github.com/mojombo/jekyll) the blog aware static site generator powering [Github pages](http://pages.github.com/).
 If you don't know what Jekyll is, [Jack Moffitt](http://metajack.im/2009/01/23/blogging-with-git-emacs-and-jekyll/) wrote a good summary:
 
-> 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.
-
-<cite>**Jack Moffitt** [Blogging with Git Emacs and Jekyll](http://metajack.im/2009/01/23/blogging-with-git-emacs-and-jekyll/)</cite>
+{% blockquote Jack Moffitt http://metajack.im/2009/01/23/blogging-with-git-emacs-and-jekyll/ Blogging with Git Emacs and Jekyll %}
+  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.
+{% endblockquote %}
 
 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.
 
-- 
cgit v1.2.1