=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=- title: Return to The Gopherverse date: 2024-01-02 00:00:00 =-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=- Well, I said I'd figure it out, and I did. A while back, I decommissioned my gopherhole [0] (gross) because there was _just_ enough overhead to managing it that I didn't want to deal with it anymore—I had a pretty janky Jekyll setup that was more like a monorepo containing two Jekyll blogs instead of just one that creates two different build directories. Thanks to some insane Jekyll plugin magic—and a little help from GitHub Copilot—I now have _one_ Jekyll instance that I can use to build both a webbed site and a gopherhole. A gopherhole that has been partially revived from the cremains of the previous one, phlogroll and all. I don't feel like doing the writeup on _how_ I accomplished this, quite yet (it's still pretty wonky, but the writing and deployment part is significantly simplified, meaning I'm more likely to actually _write_ for my new phlog), but suffice it to say it is pretty cool, and I am very excited. If you are on The Gopherverse, feel free to check it out at gopher://flower.codes [1]. --- [0]: http://flower.codes/2023/01/15/goodbye-gopher.html [1]: gopher://flower.codes --- >> This is post 017 of #100DaysToOffload EOF