It’s based on Python/Django and has an excellent developer and user experience. They pay a lot of attention to detail, including a block-based content editor, similar to Gutenberg, and first class accessibility support.
Statamic. Really enjoying working with it, makes templating so easy and the REST & GraphQL api makes it easy to use with a framework like Nextjs or Nuxt.
> Since working on my own stuff, I’ve had to drastically reduce the scale of my work, and practice self-discipline that, I suspect, many folks here would consider extreme.
As a person with never-ending, over-ambitious side projects, I'd be interested in hearing more about this!
Well, it's a long story, but I tend to have a goal for every one of my projects; even if that goal is to provide a reusable library for other projects.
The vast majority of my projects are reusable libraries and SDKs (Swift Packages, for the most part).
I do every one of my projects as if I were delivering to a Fortune 50 corporation.
Many years now of research and simulation of the system (I led the restoration of the computer mentioned in the article). There's not a single place where you can read everything, unfortunately, aside from the comment above. We're planning on making a video on it in the future. But I can cite sources:
Don Eyles describes the software side best in his book Sunburst and Luminary (which I highly recommend) but he also talks about it in some detail on his website: https://doneyles.com/LM/Tales.html
I believe it's from Eisenhower's "Chance for Peace" speech, one of his two major speeches against military spending. The other major speech was his farewell address, where he discussed the military industrial complex. If anyone's interested, I'd highly suggest watching Why We Fight, a documentary from 2005