It’s a public talk (in Italian, turn on the english subtitles) about the information technology revolution given by Gianni Degli Antoni in Milan in 1981, when networks were in their infancy and the implications for everyday life were merely hypothetical.
Only a few years ago you could hear surreal discussions about the subtle differences between “frontend developer”, “frontend engineer”, “frontend designer” and a bunch of other random job titles.
A few months ago everyone updated their job title on LinkedIn to AI Expert, there are now more AI experts than CEOs in my own company. Ok, I’m not an expert at all, I’ve done some experiments on chatGPT and I have many doubts.
How to deal with sitemap in Hugo? Well, you don’t need to do anything, Hugo will generate a complete sitemap for you during the build. That’s cool. But what if you wanted to change the structure or remove some pages?
Hugo supports by default just two taxonomies, tags and categories, but of course you can add whatever you need to create your perfect blog.
This blog is created with Hugo, one of the most known static site generator. It’s convenient especially for developers because it allows you to just write posts in Markdown, and then they will automatically be converted into static CMS pages.
Before leaving for the summer holidays I want to talk about one of the most useful and nice tools I use in my work: Notion