37 lines
1.8 KiB
HTML
37 lines
1.8 KiB
HTML
<!DOCTYPE html> <!-- indicates the language of the document -->
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<html lang="en"> <!-- indicates language of the page -->
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<head> <!-- head section contains metadata of the page -->
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<meta charset="utf-8"> <!-- indicates which character set the browser should render -->
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<meta name="viewport" content="width=device-width, initial-scale=1"> <!-- scales the page to the size of the screen, important to make page look good on mobile -->
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<title>Webpage Title Here</title> <!-- indicates the title of the page to the browser -->
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</head>
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<body>
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<h1>Webpage Title Here</h1> <!-- this will be the first line printed on the page, and will be larger than anything else -->
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<h2>Subtitle Here</h2> <!-- use this as a heading to designate a new section of content -->
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<p>Paragraph Here</p> <!-- can have multiple paragraphs in a section, each use of these tags will give you a new paragraph, with a break in between them -->
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</body>
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</html>
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What Is LogGit:
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Nothing new, it's just using Git and publically hosted repositories to distribute content in a way that is offline-first, p2p if you want, and doesn't rely on anything other than a personal computer if you want to go old school. Oh, and you don't have to build anything, it's good to go.
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This whole project is just giving it a name and a logo so it's easier to talk about it.
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How To LogGit:
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Step 1. Host the repository to your website or whatever you want to share publicly on Github or something.
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Step 2. If you can, place the logo and the url to clone that repository prominently on the site or whatever it is you're sharing.
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Step 3. Tell your friends they can get your project via LogGit.
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Step 4. Congratulate yourself on making the world a more offline-friendly place!
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Learn More:
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Check out the paper, which is just a bunch of links, because, none of this is new.
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