

plok.sh is a zero-configuration service that turns any GitHub repository into a fast, beautiful blog. There is no CMS, no dashboard, no user accounts, and no build step required. Simply add a /blog folder with markdown files to your existing GitHub repo, and plok.sh renders them as clean, themed blog posts. The service supports 20+ themes, Shiki code highlighting, optional configuration via blog.config.yaml, and even a Linktree-style links page. It also offers Google Analytics support if you add your own G-ID, and it stores nothing on its own servers.
Add a /blog folder with markdown files to any GitHub repository, and plok.sh automatically renders them as blog posts. No build step, no deployment pipeline, and no server-side storage required.
Choose from over 20 built-in themes to style your blog. Code blocks are highlighted using Shiki, ensuring clean and readable syntax highlighting for developers.
Customize your blog with an optional blog.config.yaml file. You can also add custom headers and footers for templating, and create a /blog/links.yaml file for a Linktree-style links page.
Every blog post automatically gets a table of contents generated from its headings, making long articles easier to navigate.
"Just markdown. Nothing else."
That one-liner captures the essence of plok.sh. While most blogging platforms require accounts, dashboards, build steps, and ongoing maintenance, plok.sh eliminates all of that. You write markdown in your repo, and the blog just works. It's the closest thing to a "set it and forget it" blogging experience for developers who already live in GitHub.
You want a blog that requires zero setup, zero accounts, and zero ongoing maintenance. If you already have a GitHub repo and prefer writing in markdown, plok.sh gives you a fast, beautiful blog with no extra work. It's especially useful for developers, technical writers, and anyone who values simplicity over feature bloat.
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