Georgy Alaverdyan
@georgy
I would just recommend starting out with Webflow University courses — they are free, quite short, entertaining, and funny. The production is like Hollywood level!
The courses teach basics of HTML and CSS without actually doing it (I mean the code part) which is amazing.
Webflow is a great tool and gives the ability to get started building stuff right off the bat — well, assuming a person watches the lessons, since it’s never good just head diving into tools without prior knowledge.
Those are pretty funny commercials. I can see how you'd learn a lot about the layout and things via webflow. But in this case, the person is trying to learn how to write the code by hand.
“Commercials”, lol :D
Well, yeah, Webflow’s team is really cooking with the video content.
In your case, I think, Webflow can be a good option too if a person wants to get results like really fast — but, yeah, for those who want to start coding right off the bat it’s necessary, well, to do so.
Second this.
I think Grammary is decent (though kinda bloatware-ish) because it stopped working for me since either my account was Russian or it tracked my ip, so it wasn’t working due to “Russia le bad”. I mean, okay, your stance and whatever, but actively suspending my account is a bit too much, I think.
Anyway I’m glad I’ve found out about Language Tool — it’s way better!
You can also try Lemon Squeezy, but I think Paddle has a bit lower fees.
Thanks, I found LemonSqueezy fees greater than Paddle, and the product having more issues and bugs. Using it in a small project right now.
I don’t know if this gonna be useful for you, but there’s an open-source analytics service called Umami, that you can self-host.
Damn, that’s perfect! Thanks my friend
Agree, this helps. Maybe you won’t make a shit ton of connections right off the bat, but you’ll slowly build meaningful ones. I’m not talking actively to anyone from WIP and I don’t have (any) friends, so I can relate on a deeper level than you might think (mental issues and stuff like that), but I do know people from WIP, and we both comment on each other’s tasks.
Like, I’ve been talking to @screenfluent (great guy) for a while, and we try to encourage one another. Today we’ve met accidentally on a WIP hangout, haha — talked for a while there too.
Sure, I would love to have really deep trustful connections with people, but it takes time.
So, don’t give up, lurk around, and, if you didn’t do it yet, join Telegram group chat — lots of folks talk there almost every day.
The (new) founder, John, said that the user base isn’t as active as on Slack (though I doubt it is that much higher), and he is rebuilding the project. As far as I understood, the community can make their own bots, but no official ones in Telegram.
I mean it’s his own project, all and all, so I hope someone will make a TG bot at some point.
Again, gladly, WIP has an official bot hehe!
“Commercials”, lol :D
Well, yeah, Webflow’s team is really cooking with the video content.
In your case, I think, Webflow can be a good option too if a person wants to get results like really fast — but, yeah, for those who want to start coding right off the bat it’s necessary, well, to do so.