{
  "version": "https://jsonfeed.org/version/1.1",
  "title": "status page",
  "home_page_url": "https://evotec.xyz/fr/tags/status-page",
  "feed_url": "https://evotec.xyz/fr/tags/status-page/index.feed.json",
  "description": "Evotec Main Website",
  "items": [
    {
      "id": "https://evotec.xyz/fr/blog/meet-statusimo-powershell-generated-status-page",
      "url": "https://evotec.xyz/fr/blog/meet-statusimo-powershell-generated-status-page",
      "title": "Meet Statusimo \u2013 PowerShell generated Status Page",
      "summary": "A few weeks ago, Mateusz Czerniawski, mentioned that he wants to build a Status Page for his company services. While I haven\u2019t needed for myself, it seems like an excellent idea to try and create one in PowerShell. Since I\u2019ve been working on PSWriteHTML for a while, it wasn\u2019t that far fetched idea. While PSWriteHTML has a long way to go, to be in a state I want it to be, after a few days I had a prototype that didn\u2019t require much work to generate. If you\u2019re wondering what Status Page is it\u2019s a little summary page for your users to check what is the status of services they use. It has been popular in the last few years and is offered by many services (Twitter, GitHub, Office 365 \u2013 they all have it). Companies are selling it as a service as well where you can host your status page for your users. This one is free.",
      "date_published": "2019-03-06T17:45:52.0000000Z",
      "tags": [
        "css",
        "html",
        "javascript",
        "powershell",
        "status page",
        "statusimo"
      ]
    }
  ]
}