Click the fork button at the top right of the repository.
##### 2) Rename it to be your GitHub user site
After forking, click the Settings button on your new repository and change the repository name to username.github.io -- make sure that username is replaced with your GitHub username!
Hosting your Jekyll blog on your GitHub user account takes care of a LOT of the hard work for us. You'll see shortly.
##### 3) Your blog is live!
You can now go to http://username.github.io and you'll see your site live! This can take up to 10 minutes to update, but often it's there right away.
##### 4) Customize your blog
You can quickly update a lot by simply editing the configuration file. Go to the base directory and open up _config.yml. In there you'll be able to edit your:
- Blog name
- Description
- Avatar
- Disqus comments code
- Google Analytics code
- Social links
##### 5) Publish your first post
Go to the _posts folder and you'll see the post that's currently being displayed. Just edit that to create your first blog post!
Jekyll pulls the date of the post from the filename, so you can edit that to today's date.
Ok, so writing your blog post might take more than 5 minutes, but once you've got it written you're set!
Follow the latest [GitHub Pages Custom Domain Guide](https://help.github.com/articles/setting-up-a-custom-domain-with-pages) to set up your custom domain name. I've created the CNAME file already, so that you can easily edit it within the repository.
### Publishing New Content
Alternative flow for publishing content, without needing Local Development Environment
I'm working on a portfolio site theme right now, and more to come after that. If you'd like me to let you know when I release a new theme, just [drop me your email for updates](http://getresponse.com).
### Alternative Jekyll starting points
This wasn't what you were looking for? Here are some other Jekyll starting points that might hit the spot: