Jekyll Migration Status

✅ Completed Setup

✅ Migrated Posts (12 posts)

  1. 2025-05-31-ondoingresearch.md - On Doing Research
  2. 2025-04-30-representationasstack.md - Representation as Stack
  3. 2025-04-19-ondoinganything.md - On Doing Anything
  4. 2025-03-30-amonthinquestions.md - A Month in Questions
  5. 2025-03-25-dcst.md - Trying to Understand (Double) Categorical Systems Theory
  6. 2025-02-17-consilience.md - Notes on Consilience
  7. 2024-12-31-anotheryear.md - Another Year
  8. 2024-12-27-representationsareallyouneed.md - Representations Are All You Need
  9. 2024-10-31-anotherone1.md - Another One [1]
  10. 2024-10-13-neuralrepresentations.md - Neural Representations, Manifolds, and Motivations
  11. 2024-09-27-digitallibraries.md - A Short Post on Digital Libraries and More
  12. 2023-05-27-bidding.md - Edgy Bidding (draft)
  13. 2023-05-08-inertia.md - Inertia

📝 Remaining Posts to Migrate

Based on blog/blog.html, these posts still need migration:

2024 Posts

2023 Posts

2022 Posts

Special Pages

🚀 Next Steps

  1. Test the setup locally:
    bundle install
    bundle exec jekyll serve
    
  2. Continue migrating posts - You can migrate them gradually or all at once

  3. Deploy to GitHub Pages:
    git add .
    git commit -m "Migrate to Jekyll"
    git push
    
  4. Verify - Check that:

📋 Migration Pattern

For each HTML file:

  1. Extract title from <h2> or <title>
  2. Extract date from <i> tag (format: “Month Day, Year”)
  3. Convert date to YYYY-MM-DD format
  4. Extract content (remove HTML boilerplate)
  5. Create _posts/YYYY-MM-DD-slug.md with frontmatter
  6. Convert HTML to Markdown where possible

Notes