At some point, my head started to hurt. Sanjeev is building a resume page, using a theme called “Resume”. However, I don't have any interest in such a page, nor do I have any skills or education to share to the world. I do have a presence on social media, microblog, a github profile, and an email address, but other than that nothing worth mentioning, aside from the fact I don't seek employment.

My education is so old, it is no longer of any value in the modern world. The most modern computer at that time I had access to was the Apple II. The World Wide Web was more than 10 years away from being implemented. So, I'm somewhat uneducated, other than that I can read and write, and do arithmetic. I know that doesn't apply to every adult, but I suppose most employers assume whomever puts a resume online has these basic skills, which need no mention.

Anyway, this stark contrast between my situation and that of the tutor resulted in a splitting headache, and a lot of anxiety wether or not I'll be able to create a look for my website on micro∙blog I'm somewhat happy with. The tutor's technical knowledge was rather intimidating, to say the least. I suppose this is to be expected with such a technical subject as website development.

I guess, after I've completed the course, I will peruse the Hugo themes page to find something more suitable than a tech resume. I suppose only after I'm confident implementing ready-made themes I can try and make my own.

I already knew from Mike Dane's YouTube tutorial that Hugo is a templating language, meaning you write generic text documents with (Hugo) commands and variable fields. I have a suspicion that this Udemy course doesn't touch this subject, and I have to plough through the official Hugo documentation, and/or use the other resources mentioned in the forum post.

We will see what the future brings.

👨‍💻🎓🕸🏗