Automated workflow for publishing Obsidian notes as blog posts

Observation In this blog’s previous Wordpress incarnation, I found post creation very cumbersome. As I use Obsidian in my day-to-day note taking, it seemed logical to me to see was it feasible to use as a blog input mechanism. Hypothesis It should be possible to use Obsidian notes to generate blog posts automatically. Initial Research On researching this, I found that this is actually a relatively popular method of blogging, but with several caveats that didn’t quite gel with what I was trying to achieve. ...

30 April, 2026 · 2 min · 409 words · Niall O'Callaghan

Transfer from Dreamhost

Rationale This blog previously existed on Dreamhost as a Wordpress site within a shared server hosting plan. This was useful for hosting this blog, but meant that I couldn’t do anything else with the website. Since I am trying to reduce reliance on US-based technology services, migrating this was a high value target as it would be a double-whammy: change web host from US-based servers open up a web server to host cloud service replacements Procedure Export Wordpress data from Dreamhost. Run Wordpress to Markdown conversion program (wordpress-export-to-markdown). Move converted files into Blog folder within Obsidian. Clean up Obsidian files, update frontmatter and remove export artefacts. Set up server with Hetzner. Server: Do usual admin (user setup, etc) Server: Set up file structure for subdomains. Hetzner: Create DNS zone records Server: Set up Caddy reverse proxy to handle subdomains Set up automated pipeline for converting Obsidian markdown files to blog posts using Hugo (more detail in the linked post!). Deploy static output from Hugo to server at “blog” subdomain. Change registrar nameservers for domain to point at Hetzner nameservers. Cancel Dreamhost hosting plan. Update domain name registrar to a local one instead of using Dreamhost. Discussion To be honest, I put this job off for a long time because it seemed overwhelming. I only managed by using Claude to draw up a runbook for the whole process, which definitely kept me organised. I ran into issues because of this runbook, so it wasn’t perfect, but it definitely brought me through the process in a digestible way. ...

23 April, 2026 · 2 min · 331 words · Niall O'Callaghan

Calibrating brewing equipment

Hypothesis As per my previous post about reviewing my red ale recipe, the question arose as to whether I was measuring my volumes correctly in the fermenter and kettle. I decided to test this and calibrate the markings on same. Method My good friend, the IKEA jug I filled an IKEA 1L jug up to the 1L graduation and poured it into both the kettle and fermenter until each was full. After each 1L was added, a new graduation line was drawn on the side of the vessel using permanent marker. ...

28 March, 2019 · 1 min · 198 words · Niall O'Callaghan

Reviewing my red ale recipe

Observation I’ve done two batches of the red ale (which I wrote up one run-through of) and I’m pretty happy with the flavour, but one thing that has vexed me is the quantity. I ended up with about 17L of beer at the end of the last batch, where I was expecting something closer to 25L. Hypothesis I think that if I play with the Brewer’s Friend website, I can increase the final yield without altering the flavour too much. ...

11 October, 2018 · 4 min · 741 words · Niall O'Callaghan

Gig thoughts: Amanda Palmer - National Concert Hall, 28th May 2018

Setlist Support by Andrew O’Neill In My Mind Map of Tasmania Astronaut Ampersand Missed Me The Killing Type A Mother’s Confession Mandy Goes to Med School Drowning in the Sound Vegemite (The Black Death) Coin-Operated Boy The Bed Song Poem recital by Neil Gaiman - The Mushroom Hunters Brick (Ben Folds cover) Death Thing Half Jack/Zombie (The Cranberries) mashup The Ride Ukulele Anthem Thoughts This gig was the Monday after the Abortion Referendum. Lots of positive vibes about the result. ...

29 May, 2018 · 1 min · 203 words · Niall O'Callaghan

Logo Removal: A success and a failure

Over-obtrusive branding bugs me. Especially if it’s on something that I ends up in my eyeline for extended periods. I decided to do something about two offenders - my mousemat and my headphones. My mousepad is the Corepad Deskpad XXXL, which is a great product. It’s enormous, so you can spread mouse and keyboard into whatever position is most comfortable and use the mouse on lower sensitivity easily without falling off the desk. Two gripes with it - it shows dust up a lot and the logo is enormous. The first problem is fixed with cleaning and the second…well let’s see. ...

30 November, 2017 · 2 min · 256 words · Niall O'Callaghan

Foamcore Insert: Discworld Ankh-Morpork

This is a major learning process and I knew I didn’t have the skills required starting out to do this one justice, so I saved it for game number 4! Discworld Ankh-Morpork (unfortunately out of print since the death of Terry Pratchett, the author of the Discworld books) is one of my very favourite games (only one that gives it competition is Cosmic Encounter!) so I wanted to do right by it. After learning a bit about removable parts of inserts while doing my Codenames insert and my Mysterium insert I decided I wanted to incorporate that idea into Ankh-Morpork too in order to speed up set-up and improve the use of table space. ...

23 November, 2017 · 4 min · 671 words · Niall O'Callaghan

Lessons from buying a house: The Mortgage

So You’re Going to Buy a House Money is kinda important in the house-buying progress. You might be lucky enough to be able to buy a house with cash, but most people need a mortgage to do so. Please note that I am in no way qualified to give financial advice, this is all based on my own understanding of the mortgage process and my own experiences of same. If you follow my advice and end up in debtor’s prison or indentured servitude, that is completely your own fault - absorb this information at your own risk! ...

19 November, 2017 · 6 min · 1273 words · Niall O'Callaghan

Foamcore Insert: Codenames

This one turned out extremely well! I improved my cutting technique, so I don’t have the rough edges of my Mysterium insert and I made the angles a bit less of a headache than in my Avalon insert. The big strength about this insert is that it reduces setup time to…nearly zero. You take the card box and main insert out of the box, plonk them in front of the spymasters and lay out the cards. Makes for nice quick cleaning up too. ...

16 November, 2017 · 2 min · 302 words · Niall O'Callaghan

Foamcore Insert: The Resistance Avalon

No in-progress shots of this one, unfortunately. I learned a lot of lessons from my Mysterium insert and I’m much happier with the finish on this one, though I do have some unfortunate glue spill-over around some of the joins. The big challenge with this insert was the angles for the separators for the big cards - major heartache getting those right! Inspiration from Mike Holzman over on Boardgamegeek, but I added the angled piece for the Lady of the Lake and Crown cards which allows them both to be seen at once. My core desire for this insert was that I wanted as many different components as possible to be visible at once to allow for easy grabbing. ...

9 November, 2017 · 1 min · 152 words · Niall O'Callaghan
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