Fix some typos and publish the microfeatures post
Signed-off-by: Danila Fedorin <danila.fedorin@gmail.com>
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title: "Microfeatures I Love in Blogs and Personal Websites"
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date: 2024-06-23T11:03:10-07:00
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draft: true
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tags: ["Website"]
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description: "In this post, I talk about pleasant but seemingly minor features in personal sites"
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---
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@ -21,14 +20,14 @@ I've been running a blog for a while --- some of the oldest posts I've found
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and I've seen quite a few little things that are nice to use, but relatively
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easy to implement. They don't really make or break a website; the absence of
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such features might be noticed, but will not cause any disruption for the reader.
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On the other hand, their presence serves a QoL enhancement. I find these to be
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On the other hand, their presence serves as a QoL enhancement. I find these to be
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analogous to Hillel's notion of "microfeatures". If you're interested in adding
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something to your site, consider browsing this menu to see if anything resonates!
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One last thing is that this post is not necessarily about microfeatures
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I'd like _every_ blog or personal website to have. Some ideas I present
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here are only well-suited to certain types of content and certain written
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voices. They need not be applied indiscriminantly.
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voices. They need not be applied indiscriminately.
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With that, let's get started!
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@ -99,7 +98,7 @@ I also find this very nice, though it does miss out on headings within a page.
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I've mentioned that tables of contents can communicate the structure of the
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page. However, they do so from the outset, before you've started reading.
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In their "base form", the reader stops beneffiting from tables of contents
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In their "base form", the reader stops benefiting from tables of contents
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{{< sidenote "right" "jump-top-note" "once they've started reading." >}}
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That is, of course, unless they jump back to the top of the post and
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find the table of contents again.
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@ -113,7 +112,7 @@ the [most recent article at the time of writing](https://www.quantamagazine.org/
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{{< figure src="quanta-scroll.gif" class="fullwide" caption="The progress bar on a Quanta Magazine article" alt="The progress bar on a Quanta Magazine article. As the page scrolls, an orange bar at the top gradually fills up from left to right." >}}
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One immediate thought is that this is completely superceded by the regular
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One immediate thought is that this is completely superseded by the regular
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browser scroll bar that's ever-present at the side of the page. However,
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the scroll bar could be deceiving. If your page has a comments section,
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the comments could make the page look dauntingly long. Similarly, references
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@ -357,7 +356,7 @@ at the time of writing, I'm seeing the following footer:
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{{< figure src="drew-openring.png" class="fullwide" caption="Links to other blogs from Drew DeVault's blog" alt="Links to other blogs from Drew DeVault's blog. The links consist of three side-by-side boxes, each with a title and brief excerpt." >}}
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As indicated in the image, Drew's site in particular uses a program
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called [openring](https://git.sr.ht/~sircmpwn/openring), which is based on
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called [`openring`](https://git.sr.ht/~sircmpwn/openring), which is based on
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RSS feeds (another [microfeature I love](#rss-feeds)). However,
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_how_ the site finds such articles (statically like `openring`, or
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on page load using some JavaScript) isn't hugely important to me. What's
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