Fix some typos and publish the microfeatures post

Signed-off-by: Danila Fedorin <danila.fedorin@gmail.com>
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Danila Fedorin 2024-06-23 18:02:13 -07:00
parent 6a7b6ffc1f
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@ -1,7 +1,6 @@
---
title: "Microfeatures I Love in Blogs and Personal Websites"
date: 2024-06-23T11:03:10-07:00
draft: true
tags: ["Website"]
description: "In this post, I talk about pleasant but seemingly minor features in personal sites"
---
@ -21,14 +20,14 @@ I've been running a blog for a while --- some of the oldest posts I've found
and I've seen quite a few little things that are nice to use, but relatively
easy to implement. They don't really make or break a website; the absence of
such features might be noticed, but will not cause any disruption for the reader.
On the other hand, their presence serves a QoL enhancement. I find these to be
On the other hand, their presence serves as a QoL enhancement. I find these to be
analogous to Hillel's notion of "microfeatures". If you're interested in adding
something to your site, consider browsing this menu to see if anything resonates!
One last thing is that this post is not necessarily about microfeatures
I'd like _every_ blog or personal website to have. Some ideas I present
here are only well-suited to certain types of content and certain written
voices. They need not be applied indiscriminantly.
voices. They need not be applied indiscriminately.
With that, let's get started!
@ -99,7 +98,7 @@ I also find this very nice, though it does miss out on headings within a page.
I've mentioned that tables of contents can communicate the structure of the
page. However, they do so from the outset, before you've started reading.
In their "base form", the reader stops beneffiting from tables of contents
In their "base form", the reader stops benefiting from tables of contents
{{< sidenote "right" "jump-top-note" "once they've started reading." >}}
That is, of course, unless they jump back to the top of the post and
find the table of contents again.
@ -113,7 +112,7 @@ the [most recent article at the time of writing](https://www.quantamagazine.org/
{{< 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." >}}
One immediate thought is that this is completely superceded by the regular
One immediate thought is that this is completely superseded by the regular
browser scroll bar that's ever-present at the side of the page. However,
the scroll bar could be deceiving. If your page has a comments section,
the comments could make the page look dauntingly long. Similarly, references
@ -357,7 +356,7 @@ at the time of writing, I'm seeing the following footer:
{{< 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." >}}
As indicated in the image, Drew's site in particular uses a program
called [openring](https://git.sr.ht/~sircmpwn/openring), which is based on
called [`openring`](https://git.sr.ht/~sircmpwn/openring), which is based on
RSS feeds (another [microfeature I love](#rss-feeds)). However,
_how_ the site finds such articles (statically like `openring`, or
on page load using some JavaScript) isn't hugely important to me. What's