# Moving from Jekyll to OrgMode, an experience report Adolfo Villafiorita [[!template id=vid src="https://mirror.csclub.uwaterloo.ca/emacsconf/2020/emacsconf-2020--15-moving-from-jekyll-to-orgmode-an-experience-report--adolfo-villafiorita.webm" subtitles="/2020/subtitles/emacsconf-2020--15-moving-from-jekyll-to-orgmode-an-experience-report--adolfo-villafiorita.vtt"]] [Download compressed .webm video (13.8M)](https://mirror.csclub.uwaterloo.ca/emacsconf/2020/smaller/emacsconf-2020--15-moving-from-jekyll-to-orgmode-an-experience-report--adolfo-villafiorita--vp9-q56-video-original-audio.webm) I have been a long time user of static site generators, such as Jekyll. I recently discovered Org Mode's publishing features and started appreciating flexibility and capabilities, especially when literate programming comes into play to generate "dynamic" content. In this talk/tutorial I will present the challenges I faced and how I finally moved my homepage and the University of Trento's Computational Logic website to Org Mode. - Actual start and end time (EST): Start: 2020-11-28T14.36.18; Q&A: 2020-11-28T14.51.48; End: 2020-11-28T14.53.03 # Questions ## Opinion on Firn ()? ## Do you discuss this in a blog as well? Where could I find more about it? Talk and content will be published later after the conference. Will be available on the talk page. ## Could you please paste your URLs in the notes below? (link to your site etc). The source repository of the first website (my homepage) lives here: and the output is: . The source repository of the second website (Computational Logic) lives here: and the output is: . The talk, code and links are now availble here: . has the source code for the website. # Notes - Main reason: Org has better support for literate programming. - Org mode files support in Jekyll - . - Mentioned: (org-html). - Other static webpage generators: .