to be honest jekyll still serves the purpose really well (especially for the reader)
the site is still sitting on an inexpensive entry-level cloud server, it's relatively fast, serves 300k+ page views every month and it give me some passive income
i'm pretty sure that if one uses the framework properly it can still hold on very well
i think what left me with a mixed feeling about static site generators is that it is constantly holding you back whenever you think about growing your website. i ended up building a django api that runs on the same vpc as the blog itself, and i used it to expand some features, like reading from google analytics the total page views for a given blog post, or consuming the disqus api to list the latest comments on the home page. this kind of thing.
managing the posts in static files is quite challenging as the number of posts grows. at some point you will want to change some info, or add a certain metadata and you will need to write a script to walk the _posts dir and edit the files (maybe there's a better way of doing that :P)
to be honest jekyll still serves the purpose really well (especially for the reader)
the site is still sitting on an inexpensive entry-level cloud server, it's relatively fast, serves 300k+ page views every month and it give me some passive income
i'm pretty sure that if one uses the framework properly it can still hold on very well
i think what left me with a mixed feeling about static site generators is that it is constantly holding you back whenever you think about growing your website. i ended up building a django api that runs on the same vpc as the blog itself, and i used it to expand some features, like reading from google analytics the total page views for a given blog post, or consuming the disqus api to list the latest comments on the home page. this kind of thing.
managing the posts in static files is quite challenging as the number of posts grows. at some point you will want to change some info, or add a certain metadata and you will need to write a script to walk the _posts dir and edit the files (maybe there's a better way of doing that :P)