Looking for a dead simple, free, online static website generator that lets me build a simple, nice looking, responsive landing page (single page site), download the files, and dump them onto a web server. And.... go!
@zcampau jekyll or hugo?
@skryking looks like both of these require me to download and run something locally, which is not a deal breaker -- but easy mode would be I go to www.foo.bar, dump an image and some text on the screen in a WYSIWYG editor, and then click "download files for static and responsive version of this". Btwn the two I'm leaning toward trying jekyll.
@zcampau I used Jekyll for a long time until the site needed too much interactivity to fake it and had to move to a dynamic rails site.
@skryking TBH I'm tempted to just make an image file for the whole landing page and load that. Not very accessible though. I just don't want to have to deal with any kind of package manager or repository cloning or anything. Or I could manually write some very basic HTML but it would look like crap.
@zcampau @skryking I'd recommend forestry.io with Jekyll. Their interface is very usable especially with blocks https://forestry.io/blog/sawmill-layout-composer-for-hugo-and-forestry/
Sawmill: A Razor-sharp Layout Composer for Hugo and Forestry

When it comes to creating websites, good content strategy is all about turning ideas into HTML with a minimal amount of friction. Whether using a CMS with a web interface or editing content files for a static site generator, content creators need an easy way to create visually interesting and well-structured content. Every approach is a compromise between flexibility and ease-of-use. Even if a developer could anticipate all of a content creator’s needs, these needs will change over time.