📝 CMS & Content Management Intermediate

Markdown-site

by waynesutton

Terminal-First Markdown Publishing for Modern Web

Ship markdown content directly from your terminal to live websites. Built for developers who want instant publishing without complex CMS setups.

532 Stars
85 Forks
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About This Project

This publishing framework eliminates the friction between writing markdown and deploying live content. Instead of wrestling with traditional CMS interfaces, developers can push content updates directly from their terminal and see changes go live instantly across web browsers and AI platforms.

The framework bridges the gap between local development workflows and modern content distribution. Your markdown files become immediately accessible not just to human readers, but also to large language models and AI agents that need structured content access. This dual-audience approach makes it particularly valuable in an AI-first development landscape.

Built on Convex for real-time data synchronization and Netlify for edge deployment, the architecture ensures your content propagates quickly without manual build steps. The open-source nature means you can customize the publishing pipeline to match your specific needs, whether you're shipping documentation, technical blogs, or knowledge bases.

The terminal-centric workflow appeals to developers who prefer staying in their code editor and command line rather than context-switching to web-based admin panels. Write in markdown, commit to version control, sync with a single command, and your content is live.

Key Features

  • Terminal-based content synchronization for developer-friendly workflows
  • Instant publishing without manual build or deployment steps
  • Native AI agent compatibility for LLM content consumption
  • Real-time sync powered by Convex backend infrastructure
  • Open-source architecture for custom publishing pipelines

How You Can Use It

1

Publishing technical documentation with version-controlled markdown files

2

Running developer blogs without traditional CMS overhead

3

Creating AI-accessible knowledge bases for chatbots and agents

4

Shipping product changelogs and release notes from CI/CD pipelines

Who Is This For?

Developers and technical writers who prefer command-line workflows and need fast, AI-compatible content publishing