936 private links
Part 3 of my in depth tutorial series on building a modern full-stack web app, using Java with Spring Boot, Javascript with Vue and NuxtJS, Docker, Heroku, Gitlab CI/CD. The goal of this part is that we want to prepare our web-apps for easy and modern deployment. We want to be able to quickly run our front- and backend on any machine and have the ability to scale the application if needed.
At this point we have a front- and backend that runs perfectly on our local machine. While this tutorial will make more sense if you completed the previous parts, it can also be helpful in general. The goal of this part is that we want to prepare our web-apps for easy and modern deployment. We want to be able to quickly run our front- and backend on any machine and have the ability to scale the application if needed. As with everything else there are plenty of ways to accomplish it. For this series we will work with Docker as it has gained incredible popularity over the past years. This tutorial is split into four subparts:
- What is Docker?
- Dockerizing the frontend
- Dockerizing the backend
- Running it all at once
Our new website is designed to radically reduce the energy use associated with accessing our content.
Low-tech Magazine was born in 2007 and has seen minimal changes ever since. Because a website redesign was long overdue — and because we try to practice what we preach — we decided to build a low-tech, self-hosted, and solar-powered version of Low-tech Magazine. The new blog is designed to radically reduce the energy use associated with accessing our content.
This is a roundup of the best websites where you can find and download free HTML templates built with... Tagged with html, css, webdev, frontend.