Claude4 released, attempting to develop: Hugo tags, hyperlink translation assistant
This site is developed using Hugo, but I’ve always used Chinese titles, which results in less friendly generated article links. In simpler terms, when shared, they don’t look as good because the Chinese characters are escaped into formats like %E4%BD%A0%E5%A5%BD within the links. While you can solve this by setting a slug, it’s tedious to do manually every time.
Therefore, I decided to try using Claude4 to develop a translation assistant that automatically converts Chinese titles to English slugs and adds hyperlinks within the articles.
Upgrading from a desktop to a 2.5G network card, accelerating local area network connectivity.
Desktop hardware three-in-one, in the previous text we mentioned PCIe adapter for solid state drives, where did the old SSDs go? Of course there was no waste, were any of them broken, disassembled and installed on the newly purchased ‘MechMaker Mini-3765H’ (bought a year ago).
The new machine has powerful hardware specifications: 2.5G dual network interface, PCIe4.0, WiFi6.
Recently moved house and my room doesn’t have a dedicated router for networking, all the machines are connected via wireless network; the ASUS motherboard desktop wireless card performance wasn’t great, or perhaps it was the router’s wireless access, which resulted in slow upload speeds between local networks, leading to poor network speeds between the machines.
Hugo Module Customizing Theme: Explanation of Approach
Browsing through the historical commit records, the site has undergone numerous theme switches. Each theme switch involved some custom modifications, and this is where I’m documenting the approach to customizing themes. My Github repository briefly maintained the even theme, but due to my obsessive-compulsive tendencies, I resisted upgrading the hugo compiler to the latest version, which resulted in incompatibility with the even theme, so I switched back to the stack theme.
Linux System Benchmark Test
Windows platform has RuMaster (Entertainment Master), which isn’t known for highly accurate data, but it’s still useful as a reference. Of course, there are other professional benchmarking software options available. When it comes to Linux systems, there haven’t seemed to be any particularly suitable benchmarking software found.
Sysbench is a versatile benchmark testing tool that can be used to test CPU, memory, file I/O, thread performance, and more. You can use Sysbench to execute various performance testing tasks.
Blog IDE Environment and Ramblings
This article introduces the basic concepts of Markdown and its applications in various software, recommends using VSCode as an IDE, and lists recommended plugins. The author shares their experience switching from Hexo to Hugo, emphasizing Hugo’s flexibility and customization capabilities. Finally, it provides some suggestions for quickly getting started with new technologies and shares a trick for resolving the issue of Hugo theme styles not updating.