For a long time, Gatsby was the gold standard for the "Content Mesh." By combining React with GraphQL and a massive ecosystem of plugins, it allowed developers to build incredibly fast, SEO-friendly static sites. However, as Gatsby grew, so did
For years, Jekyll has been the reliable workhorse of the static site world. It’s the engine that powered the "GitHub Pages" revolution, teaching a generation of developers that they didn't need a heavy database to run a blog. But as the web
Eleventy (11ty) has carved out a massive following by being the "simpler" static site generator. It’s loved for its zero-config philosophy and its ability to turn a folder of Markdown files into a blazing-fast website. But as a site grows,
When it comes to speed and developer experience, Hugo has long been the gold standard for static site generators (SSGs). It’s fast, secure, and loves Markdown. But for many, the "CLI-only" workflow becomes a bottleneck when a site grows