Add old permalinks

This commit is contained in:
Shadowfacts 2019-01-04 13:30:14 -05:00
parent 2e60126ded
commit 7e5ed41011
Signed by untrusted user: shadowfacts
GPG Key ID: 94A5AB95422746E5
6 changed files with 6 additions and 0 deletions

View File

@ -2,6 +2,7 @@
metadata.title = "Hello, World!"
metadata.category = "meta"
metadata.date = "2016-05-06 11:13:18 -0400"
metadata.oldPermalink = "/meta/2016/06/07/hello-world/"
```
Hello, again, world! Welcome to the third iteration of my website. Originally my site was hosted on GitHub pages and only available at [shadowfacts.github.io](https://shadowfacts.github.io). I wrote a couple of tutorials on using [Forge](http://minecraftforge.net) to mod 1.6.4, but never really finished anything other than super basic setup/recipes. Later, after I got [shadowfacts.net](https://shadowfacts.net), I decided to set up a propper website using [WordPress](https://wordpress.org). I copied over all of the old tutorials from my old GitHub pages site, but never really did anything else with it. After my website being offline for almost a year, I've finally decided to switch back to GitHub for the simplicity (also I <3 [Jekyll](https://jekyllrb.com)). Using Jekyll, I've got a structure in place that I can use to easily publish tutorials in a structured format. There is one tutorial series that I'm currently writing and that is [Forge Mods in 1.9](/tutorials/forge-modding-19/), and hopefully more series will follow.

View File

@ -2,6 +2,7 @@
metadata.title = "Introducing Mirror"
metadata.category = "java"
metadata.date = "2016-07-28 16:45:00 -0400"
metadata.oldPermalink = "/java/2016/07/28/introducing-mirror/"
```
Allow me to introduce my latest project, Mirror. Mirror is a [reflection][] library for Java designed to take advantage of the streams, lambdas, and optionals introduced in Java 8.

View File

@ -2,6 +2,7 @@
metadata.title = "The Great Redesign"
metadata.category = "meta"
metadata.date = "2016-08-07 15:39:48 -0400"
metadata.oldPermalink = "/meta/2016/08/07/the-great-redesign/"
```
Welcome to the fourth iteration of my website. I'm still using Jekyll, however I've rewritten most of the styles from scratch. This theme is based on the [Hacker theme][HackerHexo] for [Hexo][] which is turn based on the [Hacker WordPress theme][HackerWP] but it has some notable differences.

View File

@ -2,6 +2,7 @@
metadata.title = "Type: A FOSS clone of typing.io"
metadata.category = "misc"
metadata.date = "2016-10-08 17:29:42 -0400"
metadata.oldPermalink = "/misc/2016/10/08/type/"
```
**TL;DR**: I made an awesome FOSS clone of [typing.io](https://typing.io) that you can check out at [type.shadowfacts.net](https://type.shadowfacts.net) and the source of which you can see [here](https://github.com/shadowfacts/type).

View File

@ -2,6 +2,7 @@
metadata.title = "The Pretty Good Minor Update"
metadata.category = "meta"
metadata.date = "2017-02-17 14:30:42 -0400"
metadata.oldPermalink = "/meta/2017/02/17/the-pretty-good-minor-update/"
```
It's been about six months since the last time I redesigned the site, and while I didn't want to redesign it yet again, I felt it could use a little update to make sure everything's still good.

View File

@ -2,6 +2,7 @@
metadata.title = "Comments Powered by GitHub"
metadata.category = "meta"
metadata.date = "2017-04-23 09:05:42 -0400"
metadata.oldPermalink = "/meta/2017/04/23/comments-powered-by-github/"
```
After seeing [this article][orig] the other morning about replacing the Disqus comments on a blog powered by a static site generator (like this one) with comments backed by a GitHub issue and some front-end JavaScript to load and display them, I thought it would be fun to implement something similar. First I only built the code for displaying comments, similar to the aforementioned article, but I decided to take it one step further by allowing users to submit comments directly from my site.