From b37eda084ee62bcea5bd28e6ab36ae6553a1069f Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Michael <184316+muescha@users.noreply.github.com> Date: Thu, 2 Apr 2020 14:37:36 +0200 Subject: [PATCH] remove local domain (#22729) Co-authored-by: gatsbybot --- .../2020-03-26-service-relief-project/index.md | 16 ++++++++-------- 1 file changed, 8 insertions(+), 8 deletions(-) diff --git a/docs/blog/2020-03-26-service-relief-project/index.md b/docs/blog/2020-03-26-service-relief-project/index.md index 4ce5aecfa6500..fdabc87dc8794 100644 --- a/docs/blog/2020-03-26-service-relief-project/index.md +++ b/docs/blog/2020-03-26-service-relief-project/index.md @@ -18,7 +18,7 @@ State-mandated social distancing shutdowns are being rolled out across the count Wonderfully, though, fundraisers are popping up all over the place to provide some emergency relief. Through them I saw a way to help out: creating a fast, free and above all easy way for communities to gather local relief fundraisers in a single website, where donors can easily find and contribute. It turns out I wasn't the only one with this idea! -**In this post: ** +**In this post:** - [About the project](#about) - [How it all began](#beginnings) @@ -32,7 +32,7 @@ The Service Relief Project is a boilerplate for launching blazing-fast zero-cost Here's what it does: -- Generates a static website using [GatsbyJS](https://gatsbyjs.org) +- Generates a static website using [Gatsby](https://gatsbyjs.org) - Uses [Airtable](https://airtable.com) to manage your listings and categories - Includes an Airtable form to collect local submissions and add them to Airtable for approval - Can be personalized to a city or region without touching a line of code @@ -42,7 +42,7 @@ Using Gatsby to build and generate a static website based on data from a remote In order to provide the ability to launch a zero-cost directory of fundraisers for your local area, we've: -- Open-sourced the [entire project on Github](https://github.com/service-relief) +- Open-sourced the [entire project on GitHub](https://github.com/service-relief) - Written [detailed instructions on how to get started](https://www.servicerelief.us/start/) - Released a [Gatsby Starter](https://github.com/service-relief/gatsby-starter-service-relief) and a [Gatsby Theme](https://github.com/service-relief/service-relief/tree/master/themes/gatsby-theme-service-relief) - Released a [one-click deployment to Netlify](https://app.netlify.com/start/deploy?repository=https://github.com/service-relief/gatsby-starter-service-relief) @@ -53,7 +53,7 @@ _This project was inspired by [Chicago Service Relief](https://chicagoservicerel Here are a few of the sites that have already launched using this project: -- [Seattle Service Relief](http://seattleservicerelief.com/) +- [Seattle Service Relief](https://seattleservicerelief.com/) - [Denver Service Relief](https://denverservicerelief.com/) - [Austin Service Relief](https://austinservicerelief.com/) - [Sioux Falls Service Relief](https://siouxfallsservicerelief.com/) @@ -69,7 +69,7 @@ These are unprecedented times, and from my small home office in Omaha, Nebraska Drew and I have worked together in the past and I've both built and managed several websites for him over the years. All of them have been powered by [WordPress](https://wordpress.org), but I knew that spinning up another WordPress website was going to be overkill for something this simple. -That's where Gatsby came in. For the Seattle Service Relief site, I generated a new site using LekoArts' [Gatsby Minimal Blog](https://www.gatsbyjs.org/starters/LekoArts/gatsby-starter-minimal-blog/) by running `gatsby new` and customizing a quick site. I had used the same starter on my personal site which helped speed up the process. A few hours later I messaged him back with a link to the live site. +That's where Gatsby came in. For the Seattle Service Relief site, I generated a new site using LekoArts' [Gatsby Minimal Blog](/starters/LekoArts/gatsby-starter-minimal-blog/) by running `gatsby new` and customizing a quick site. I had used the same starter on my personal site which helped speed up the process. A few hours later I messaged him back with a link to the live site. ![Text message conversation with Drew where I announced that seattleservicerelief.com was live](./images/conversation-drew-finished-site.png) @@ -106,7 +106,7 @@ _A special thank-you to [Dustin Schau](https://twitter.com/SchauDustin), [Aisha Over the next hour and a half, we developed a prototype using the following tool stack: -- Github, for hosting the code of the site +- GitHub, for hosting the code of the site - Airtable, for managing data - Gatsby, to generate the site based on Airtable data - Netlify, for building and deploying the site @@ -138,9 +138,9 @@ I'll also be publishing my personal workflow for building and deploying your Ser Getting the word out to your network is the best way to raise awareness of this project. We'll be listing all published Service Relief websites on [https://www.servicerelief.us/](https://www.servicerelief.us/). -##### 3. Contribute to the project on Github +##### 3. Contribute to the project on GitHub -We've published this entire [project on Github](https://github.com/service-relief) to open it up for the world to contribute back. Here's what you'll see there: +We've published this entire [project on GitHub](https://github.com/service-relief) to open it up for the world to contribute back. Here's what you'll see there: - `service-relief` - this is the monorepo for the entire project, including the ServiceRelief.us website, Gatsby Theme, and Gatsby Starter. You'll want to fork and submit your pull requests against this repository. - `gatsby-starter-service-relief` - this is an automatically-generated Gatsby Starter based on the monorepo. When the monorepo is updated, this starter is automatically updated.