This quick-hit breakout session discusses all things image-related in live Q&A. We touched on pre-loading images and image optimization best practices on Gatsby sites.
Learn how to win content editors and marketers over by enabling a great content editing experience on Gatsby sites using SmartLink SDK and Web Spotlight.
MMT Tech Talk is a monthly (virtual) meetup that this time was focused on news around Gatsby. I presented how to use the new StaticImage and GatsbyImage components.
The Jamstack is a modern approach to building websites and apps, delivering better performance, higher security, lower cost of scaling, and a better developer experience. However, with so many tools to choose from, it’s easy to feel overwhelmed.
Resolving links between items and rich text elements are completely different in the new and fast Kontent source plugin for Gatsby. Is it easier or more complicated?
The original Lumen is built with Gatsby and connected to Kentico Kontent headless CMS. The site is already running, but some styles are missing as they were hard-coded in components. Uhh. Let's fix that and see where that takes us...
Gatsby helps developers build blazing fast websites. But how fast is build time for the actual website itself? And how can one developer advocate help reduce build times for thousands of others?
The original Lumen is built with Gatsby and connected to Kentico Kontent headless CMS. I tried to convert it to Gridsome last week and stumbled upon a nasty error that blocked me for several hours.
When we are considering which framework to use for new web projects, we tend to prefer the tools we know regardless of how suitable they are. So I tried the opposite.
The original Lumen is built with Gatsby and connected to Kentico Kontent headless CMS. I'll try to convert it to Gridsome and expect to have everything done in 1-2 hours. Crazy estimate? We'll see :-)
I managed to update the menu component to use the new version of the Gatsby source plugin for Kentico Kontent. It's a bit of recursive thinking, may need to adjust the implementation in the future, but it works for now.
One of the reasons we create JAMstack sites is because of their great performance. Serving static files is easy and quick. But what if we upgrade the visitor's experience and make the site available offline?
Everywhere you look, you see the word “Jamstack.” So you’ve probably thought about building a site using a static site generator. But where do you start? How do you choose the right framework for you and your team?