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-date = 2020-12-27
-title = "Redesigning My Website: The 5 KB Result"
-description = "A retrospective on my recent website redesign."
-+++
-
-# A Brief History
-
-As a form of continuous learning and entertainment, I've been running a
-handful of websites since 2016 when I took my first programming courses
-in college. I maintain one main website, the place I consider the
-official website to represent me. Under this site, I have a handful of
-subdirectories and subdomains.
-
-One of the parts I've enjoyed the most about web development is the
-aspect of designing an identity for a web page and working to find
-exciting ways to display the site's content. Inevitably, this means
-I've changed the designs for my websites more times than I could
-possibly count. Since I don't really host anything on my main webpage
-that's vital, it allows me the freedom to change things as inspiration
-strikes.
-
-Historically, I've relied on core utilities for spacing, components,
-and layouts from [Bootstrap](https://getbootstrap.com) and added custom
-CSS for fonts, accents, colors, and other items. I also tend to create
-sites with no border radius on items, visible borders, and content that
-takes up the entire screen (using whitespace inside components instead
-of whitespace around my components).
-
-# The Redesign Process
-
-About a week ago, I found myself wishing for a new design yet again. The
-prior design was largely inspired by IBM's [Carbon Design
-System](https://www.carbondesignsystem.com) and relied on jQuery,
-Bootstrap, along with some compressed
-[.webp](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/WebP) images.
-
-To anyone who knows my preferences toward web design - and even in my
-personal life - it should be no surprise that I immediately started
-looking for inspiration on minimalism. While there are some decent
-minimalistic designs on sites like
-[Dribbble](https://dribbble.com/search/shots/popular/web-design?q=minimalism),
-people seem to mostly discuss [brutalist web
-design](https://brutalist-web.design) when you ask about minimalism.
-While brutalist web design doesn't have to be minimal, it often is.
-
-I suppose, in a way, I did create a brutalist website since my HTML is
-semantic and accessible, hyperlinks are colored and underlined, and all
-native browser functions like scrolling and the back button work as
-expected. However, I didn't think about brutalism while designing these
-sites.
-
-The new design followed a simple design process. I walked through the
-screens on my blog and asked myself: "Is this element necessary for a
-user?" This allowed me to first start by removing all javascript, which
-had the sole purpose of allowing users to open a collapsed navbar on
-mobile. Replacing the collapsible navbar allowed me to remove both
-jQuery and Bootstrap's javascript.
-
-Next, I removed things like author names (since I'm literally the only
-person who will ever write on this site), multiple ways to click on a
-blog post card, blog post descriptions, and the scroll-to-top button. It
-also helped to move all categories to a single page, rather than have
-each category on its own page.
-
-The final big piece to finish the
-"[KonMari](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marie_Kondo#KonMari_method)"-like
-part of my process was to remove Bootstrap CSS in its entirety. However,
-this meant pulling out a few very useful classes, such as `.img-fluid`
-and the default font stacks to keep in my custom CSS.
-
-After removing all the unnecessary pieces, I was finally able to
-reorganize my content and add a very small amount of custom CSS to make
-everything pretty. This took a brief amount of time, effectively just
-consisting of me converting `<div>` tags into things like
-`<ul>` lists and choosing accent colors.
-
-# The Results
-
-## Reflection
-
-So, what did all of this reorganizing do to my webpages? Well, first, my
-websites are now **ridiculously fast**. Since the prior designs were
-also minimal and didn't have many images, they measured up in
-Firefox's Network Monitor around 300 KB - 600KB. After making the
-changes, my main site is at 5 KB transferred (22 KB total), and my blog
-is at 6.5 KB transferred (13 KB total). **That means the redesigned
-pages are less than 2% the size of the old designs.**
-
-Google Lighthouse ranks the new webpage as 100 in performance,
-accessibility, and best practices, with SEO at 92 since they think tap
-targets are not sized appropriately for mobile users. First contextual
-paints of the pages are under 0.8 seconds with 0 ms of blocking time.
-However, the blog subdomain ranks at 100 for all four categories! First
-contextual paints of the blog homepage are under 1.0 seconds with 0 ms
-of blocking time, due to the fact that the CSS for my blog is within a
-separate CSS file, and the CSS for my main website is simply embedded in
-the HTML file.
-
-Now that everything is complete, I can confidently say I'm happy with
-the result and proud to look at the fastest set of websites I've
-created so far.