Building a Website using Jekyll, GitHub, HTML, CSS, and CSS

A MOMENT. AN ERA.

I’ve started building my archive from the ground up. Piece by piece, I am creating a digital space for everything I’ve ever touched.

To be honest, I’ve spent hours studying, crafting, and creating—until I realized, at the end of the day, this stuff deserves to last. *enters static site generator*

I’ve reached a point in my life where my education and career have created many paths for me. Some I won’t get to walk, and many I have treaded through the ground. It was time to clean up my stuff.

So please, if you take anything from this or me, let it be the desire to memorialize your legacy. Preparing your thoughts and possessions at death and old age is a blessing, but doing so long before is equally sane. Lucky for me, my interest in software and game development has led to the exploration of preservation and the radical art of code through this task.

This project isn’t just portfolio, it’s practice in prose. Truthfully, it’s been a painful, yet rewarding, crash course in GitHub Pages, Jekyll, Ruby, HTML, CSS, JavaScript, and VS Code.

Beyond this current project of mine, I am very much invested in memorializing not just my creations, but the legacies of communities that are far too often overlooked. If you’ve read this far, you care about memory, too. Tap the link below to see where the site is now, or drop a comment to simply join in on the fun.

https://lilozine.github.io

TLDR: anybody need an archivist/web developer? 💻✨

‪Li “The Game Curator”‬
‪@lilozine.bsky.social

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