If volume of content is in any way indicative of success, then Jamstack is a success. This particular issue is more jam-packed (haha! see what I did there?) than usual, and even then it was difficult to narrow it down. So rather than the long-winded intro (trust me, I am an expert at being long-winded), this week I'll let you jump straight to the content. Enjoy!
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Incremental Static Regeneration: Its Benefits & Its Flaws Incremental static regeneration is a feature built into Next.js that adds some on-demand server side rendering to an otherwise pre-rendered site. This post does a really good job of explaining how it works, why it is cool and some of the potential drawbacks to it.
Cassidy Williams
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From Design to Development Crash Course An extensive and free video course that takes you from design using Figma, to implementation with Next.js to authentication with Netlify Identity and finally to deployment on Netlify.
Colby Fayock
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How to Generate an RSS Feed for Your Blog The long forgotten RSS feed seems to making a comeback (thank you!), and this post offers a unique solution to generate this at runtime rather than build time using a Netlify Function.
Salma Alam-Naylor
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How to Integrate Comments to Your Static Site This is a common request on even simple Jamstack sites and there are a variety of solutions. This article looks at two options with examples: Disqus and Webmentions.
Raymond Camden
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Angular Dynamic Data with Sanity.io A new Jamstack Explorers course that walks through creating an Angular application that grabs data using Sanity.io, Netlify Functions and webhooks!
Tara Manicsic
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WP Engine Goes 'Headless,' Jumps in the Jamstack Atlas is a new commercial headless CMS offering from managed Wordpress provider WP Engine. This space is growing fast, with a lot of new companies seeming to jump into a Jamstack+Wordpress commercial offering.
Mike Melanson
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Thanks for reading. Catch you next time — Brian
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