- Company
Join our front-end team!
We are looking for a front-end developer to join our team in Oslo developing our core product at Sanity.io
Simen Svale
Join our front-end team!
We are looking for a front-end developer to join our team in Oslo developing our core product at Sanity.io
Simen Svale
We are looking for a document store engineer to join our team
We are looking for a new backend developer to join our team developing the document store powering Sanity.io. Could this be you, or someone you know?
Simen Svale
Design and build a real time, planet spanning document store
We are looking for a seasoned developer with architect-skills to drive the long term development of the heart of our business stratgy: our globally distributed, real time, collaborative document storage and distribution engine.
Simen Svale
Be our Site Reliability Engineer!
We are looking for an Site Reliability Engineer to help build our global content platform. Could this be you, or someone you know?
Simen Svale
Live coding with Gatsby.js and Sanity.io: How to make a portfolio website
Our developer Espen joined Gatsby.js’ Jason Lengstorf on Twitch and taught him how to use Sanity.io as a content backend for Gatsby.js. Together they made a portfolio website.
Knut Melvær
JAMstack Oslo Meetup: The one about Gatsby.js
We co-hosted and live-streamed the first JAMstack Oslo meetup. See the videos from the talks about Gatsby.js.
Knut Melvær
How to quickly set up a Gatsby.js JAMstack website with a headless CMS
We built a Gatsby.js example that ships with a Sanity.io editing environment. Here’s how to set it up with your own content, modify the look-and-feel with realt-time previews, and deploy on Netlify or Zeit’s Now.
Knut Melvær
Blazing fast development with Gatsby and Sanity.io
Releasing the Gatsby Source plugin and example project with real-time content preview in watch mode
Knut Melvær
Sanity.io on the devmode.fm podcast
Our developer advocate Knut Melvær appeared on the devmode.fm podcast and talked Sanity.io with Andrew Welch, Patrick Harrington, and Lauren Dorman
Knut Melvær
2018: In review
2018: The year we got to know you! We deeply appreciate each and every question and piece of feedback you have given us these past few months. Many of the highlights mentioned in this post are direct responses to discussions we've had with you.
Even Westvang
Introducing the new Editor for Portable Text
With the new editor for Portable Text, developers get a pocket full of new features for configuring and customizing a productive editing environment for deeply typed content.
Even Westvang
How we blog
In this post we give a quick summary of how, where, and why we blog at Sanity.io.
Knut Melvær
Welcoming our new engineering manager, Jemmima!
We’re delighted to announce that Jemmima Knight is joining Sanity.io as Engineering Manager.
Magnus Hillestad
Creating Custom Content Blocks: Wordpress Gutenberg vs. Sanity
The new Gutenberg editor for Wordpress comes with the ability to create custom content blocks using React. Let’s compare how easy it is to make those in Sanity.
Knut Melvær
First class responsive video support with the new Mux plugin
When building Sanity, we emphasized building a flexible image pipeline to transform and re-crop your images. We have no ambition of doing the same for video.
Knut Melvær
Our article on succeeding with headless CMS projects is up on Smashing Magazine!
Using a Structured Content Management System is a great way to free your content from presentation and web centric distribution. But how to go about it? Our developer advocate Knut Melvær has written an article for Smashing Magazine to suggest some overarching strategies, with some concrete real-world examples on how to think about working with structured content.
Even Westvang
Simen Svale Skogsrud explaining Headless CMS on The Cherryleaf Podcast
Listen to the interview The Cherryleaf Podcast did with co-founder and CTO Simen Svale Skogsrud on what a Headless CMS is. 🎙
Knut Melvær
Indexing in Algolia using serverless functions (and observables!)
With Sanity’s powerful export API it's easy to make a small serverless function in order to index all your content in Algolia for the times you want to harness its search capabilities. It's also a nice way to learn about observables in JavaScript.
Knut Melvær