astr-hal

thank you cohost

  • he/him but anything works honestly

21 🇵🇭 🇹🇼 bi tme transmasc
i like drawing ocs

18+


carrd (has twitter & instagram)
astr-hal.carrd.co/
neocities (work in progress)
astr-hal.neocities.org/

posts from @astr-hal tagged #save

also:

Osmose
@Osmose

Phantomake is a static site generator that I've been working on for the past few weeks. It's a single binary with no dependencies that you can use to generate your website. It lets you apply templates to your HTML pages, reduce copy-pasting by reusing common snippets of code, convert markdown files to HTML, and more. You can use Phantomake on an existing static website without any extra setup and only generate the pages you need.

Phantomake is useful for almost any static site, but specifically made for indie web / small web sites that are already hand-writing HTML and want straightforward improvements like includes or pagination.

Because Phantomake is built with Bun, it is only available on MacOS and Linux for now—Windows will be supported as soon as Bun makes an official Windows release. Bun landed Windows support a while ago and Phantomake is now available as an EXE for running on the command line!

It's open source and available on Github. Bug reports or fixes are welcome!

Feedback wanted!

Phantomake is pretty fresh and I'm using it for my own site and the tool's documentation, but I would love any feedback on how good or bad it works for you! Feature requests are welcome, just keep in mind that the tool is intentionally simple and requests may not be entertained depending on their complexity.

But please, if you're interested, try it out and let me know if it helps you!


Osmose
@Osmose

Reminder if you're getting back into making your own website that I wrote a static site generator with the best logo and you should use it and ask me about it

EDIT: lmao adding windows support took 5 mins and I did it from a Macbook, enjoy


@astr-hal shared with:


DeusExBrockina
@DeusExBrockina
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echosoul
@echosoul

this shit has really been burning me out on jungle lately. i will love it forever but seeing it coopted into this bullshit has been so depressing. seeing this shit get turned into buzzwords by people like me like... jungle is one of the most revolutionary art forms in music history.
if youve never engaged with the first wave of jungle i encourage you too, this documentary is a good place to start:

you should also know there is huge revival scene bringing back the og sounds. people and labels like Tim Reaper/futureRETRO, Green Bay Wax, Scientific Wax, Deep Jungle, Infrared (to name a few among many many others) have been holding it down for years now. i may be like autistic but searching this shit out is not hard. jungle old and new deserves your respect. and it makes me mad that i have to tell you all this. it is much more than "peshay studio set 1996" and far far more than any number of youtube ps1 jungle compilations. that music is good and great but treating it as the be-all-end-all turns this art form into a meme. and it deserves far more than that.


samanthaistyping
@samanthaistyping

if you don't know what Jordana did for jungle, or the price she paid for being Black and trans in the 90s, i got some history for you! (there's even an easter egg about this track in there~)

she's rejoined the seattle scene in the past few years and that alone brings me so much joy i cannot express it.


lushspirits
@lushspirits

Tee Vera

DJ Asexual
(she primarily makes techno music but more recently has been venturing into Jungle ("part-time junglist," in their own words))

andrea_andrea

Qube Honey

Jungle and by extension Drum n Bass would not be what is without its black and queer artists like Jordana. The scene is alive and thriving and I hope more ppl can get acquainted with what the scene has evolved into~


echo-parallax
@echo-parallax

Re-posting these artist recs for Bandcamp Friday!

Also, if anyone's interested in a book about the history of jungle/drum 'n' bass from 1989 to 2004, Brian Belle-Fortune's All Crews: Journeys Through Jungle / Drum & Bass Culture is fantastic, mixing oral histories, tales from artists, labels, and pirate radio stations, the author's own experience of the scene, and more. And it covers early jungle/DnB artists like Fabio, Grooverider, Goldie, Kemistry, Cleveland Watkiss, A Guy Called Gerald, Shy FX, DJ Brockie, Kenny Ken, MC Skibadee, Roni Size, and DJ Flight -- many of whom are still making music today.

Word from the website is that there's a new edition currently in the layout process and scheduled to release some time later this year (delayed from 2023) and as an audiobook featuring many of the original artists!


m3l0dica
@m3l0dica
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