@eonpilot Thanks!
There are a couple of things I'm thinking:
1. Export – you can export your site as static HTML to a Github repo and deploy that.
2. Gist – You can use a Gist as the source of your site, the site would auto-update when you update the Gist.
very cool! had an issue signing up with desktop safari, the text fields during signup didn't show what i was typing, had to use chrome. same behavior in the password field when i went back to safari to login.
Tried it. Good start. I think there is lack of sufficient help in understanding what is possible and what steps one should follow to have his site up. Drag and drop options can even make housewives create their own websites. Good luck, looking forward to next version. I did found out the Guide but lack of available themes were sole reason why i returned unimpressed.
@muzzytree thanks for the feedback. To address your points:
1. Drag and drop is actually the default for most users and should be easier to grok for non-programmers. The markdown mode is an experiment that can be toggled under Settings > Experiments (It's just enabled by default if signing up via the /markdown landing page).
2. Lack of theming is a conscious design choice, though I appreciate that might not be to everyone's taste. The idea is that the layout disappears and your content is the focus.
@meleyal Hey! I just realized UpSite is no longer a thing :-((( Is there an alternative to it that you'd suggest?
I'd like to input some markdown and get a tiled-style-wesbite like the one I could do with UpSide
Hello Product Hunters, maker here.
Upsite has been around in my life for about 5 years. I've tested the patience of friends and family espousing the idea, compiled several novels worth of notes and drawings, and finally sat down to build it about a year ago.
It was born from experience, having spent most of my adult life making websites for people, from the smallest of small businesses up to giant mega-corporations.
Upsite has evolved over time as I tried to position it against the incumbents. At some point I remembered my original inspiration of making basically "Muxtape for websites". Muxtape showed me there was another way to design for the web, one that rejected complexity while remaining entirely human-centered. I redesigned the app and it's features with this radical minimalism in mind, paring it down to the absolute basics. Each time I booted it up I became more fond of it; I was looking at the idea that had been floating around in my head for the last 5 years.
So the Upsite you see today, though apparently simple, is the result of many iterations. It's a raw, basic version of what I hope can grow into something much bigger and better.
Upsite itself is a drag+drop builder that enables anyone to put up a simple, minimal website in no time.
Upsite.markdown is a more hacker-friendly version of Upsite that enables writing your site in markdown. It uses the same markdown syntax you know and love but with some additional sugar enabling simple layout and embeds.
Check out the roadmap to see what's coming next:
https://www.upsite.io/roadmap
Easter egg: Add /source.md to any Upsite to see the markdown source: http://meleyal.upsite.io/source.md
I'm around today to answer any questions. Thanks for reading!