The “theory” is with Jekyll it recognizes markdown files and serves it up as a regular file. Awesome! Except this wants Jekyll install with the Repo, which needs Ruby and RubyGems (installed locally and thus with the repo and the blog)
Alternatives on Netlify - Jekyll - Middleman (also a Ruby thing) - Node, NPM and Yarn ?? - Python - Hugo - Bower - Grunt - Hugo - Written in GO - Roots - Gatsby -
Git Client on Android While doing some research for a git client for android I came across some issues. This post is not an app review or what I eventually settled on. Rather something that I hope will help someone else.
Issue History The first issue is that I wanted to created my own SSH key to access the various git remotes. I had some proprietary and some personal, all of which were on various remote git servers.
STEPS Step 1 Download Apache for Windows
Step 2 Download PHP for Windows for Apache
Threadsafe is for IIS NTS (non-threadsafe) is for IIS Step 3 Unzip and put on the C drive root
Step 4 Place Apache on the C drive root Its the Apache24 folder Should be at the following location C:\Apache24
Step 5 Add PHP path to the System Variables Path
Step 6 Add the Apache24
Step 7 Add the Apache monitor to the startup services
dbForge Studio https://www.devart.com/dbforge/mysql//studio/
dbWorkBench lite
squirrel db http://www.squirrelsql.org/ hasn’t been updated in a few yeas and is just a java file
Tora Tool https://github.com/tora-tool/
dbvisualizer https://www.dbvis.com/download/
mydb studio http://www.mydb-studio.com/index.php?lang=en&p=3
omni db https://www.omnidb.org/en/downloads-en
https://mariadb.com/kb/en/library/database-workbench/