D-blog is a short name from a “Developer Blog”. We called our template D-blog beacuse finally it’s a site which could be useful not only for developers but also graphic designers, freelancers etc.
We tried to create something simple, elegant and easy to modify. Our template is concentrated over typography and good looking layout, even without using super-quality images. As ae developer you don’t really want to look for a image cover for your next blog post every time, you just want to write something interesting – with D-Blog – you can focus on writing, your content will look amazing even without images.
D-blog design is clean and professionally crafted, all of the HTML elements are grouped and named. You can modify CSS using our SASS files with many variables to modify look of the template or just modify precompiled CSS files.
D-blog – key features
HTML and Tailwind version
Portfolio filtering
Awesome typography
Easy to customize
Pixel perfect design
Well organized structure
SASS (.scss) sources and Vite powered Tailwind version
What’s the best advice you were given or could give to a college student?
, want an answer to this question?
What is the best advice you've received?
: What is the best advice that anyone has ever given you?
A very smart woman I worked with once toe that if I eliminated the word "but" from my professional vocabulary, I'd find greater acceptance for my ideas, and greater cooperation from my team members. She said people would have a very different perception of me if I could change this one thing.
The reason, she said, is because the word "but" negates everything that precedes it, and you cast a negative spin on anything you say when you use it.
Consider, for example, "We can do it this way, but it'll be way too expensive given our budget," versus "We can do it this way, and if we do, we'll need to cut back on other important features." The first indicates that we can't even consider the option. The second acknowledges possibility and describes consequenCe
What's the best life advice that someone gave you?
I was 19 years old.
I was working a brutal 9–5 sales internship making over 100 cold calls a day.
Like many people working a 9–5, I had ideas to start my own busine money for my own company. Not someone else’s.
I told my friends this.
“Cool idea Nathan but you can’t start a company until you’re older”
Why?
What does age have to do with being a successful founder?
I’d argue experience does but I know a lot of young people who have more experience than some of their elders.
That’s when it hit me.
I was reading the Four Hour Work Week and one of the tips Tim suggests is to write down your fears.
What is the worst that will happen?
I realized if I started a business and failed, nothing really that bad would happen.
So I started.
I Googled, how to start a company?
That first company went on to do just over six figures a year selling watches and hats.
The best advice I’ve learned is to not wait.
Waiting is for losers.
If you want to do something, just do it.
You know the best time to plant a tree was 20 years ago. The second best time is now.
Stop waiting, start doing.