Python Insider Blog Moves to New Home on GitHub
The official Python blog, Python Insider, has been relocated to a new domain backed by a Git repository. All 307 posts from the old Blogger era have been successfully migrated, and existing URLs automatically redirect to the new site at blog.python.org.
"Contributing to the blog meant having a Google account and using Blogger's editor, which raised the barrier unnecessarily," said a Python Software Foundation spokesperson. "Now, anyone can submit a post via a pull request."
Background
The previous setup relied on Google's Blogger platform, which limited contributions to those with a Google account and familiarity with its editor. The new system uses Markdown files stored in a Git repository, lowering the entry barrier for community writers.
Posts are stored as content/posts/{slug}/index.md with YAML frontmatter for metadata. Images are placed alongside the post file. No special tools are required beyond a text editor.
How to Contribute
Want to write about Python releases, sprints, or governance updates? The process is straightforward:
- Fork the repository at github.com/python/python-insider-blog.
- Create a new directory under
content/posts/with your desired slug. - Add an
index.mdfile with your content, optionally uploading images. - Open a pull request.
The README provides detailed guidance on frontmatter fields and local preview.
Technology Stack
The site is built with Astro and deployed as static HTML. A Keystatic CMS is available in development mode for those who prefer a visual editor, but it remains optional. Styling uses Tailwind CSS, and deployment runs through GitHub Actions.
RSS feed is now at blog.python.org/rss.xml. Existing subscribers should see automatic updates, but manual subscription change is advised if issues arise.
What This Means
This migration opens the official Python blog to broader community participation. Anyone with basic Git and Markdown knowledge can propose posts, fostering a more inclusive and agile publishing process.
"The new setup reduces friction for contributors while preserving a clean, automated workflow," the spokesperson added. "We expect more timely posts from community members."
Users encountering broken links or migration errors are encouraged to file issues on the GitHub repository. Pull requests for fixes are also welcome.