He's doing that thing [1] where's he's writing about a thing and presumably wants me - the interested reader - to know more about that thing because it's the thing he's spending all his time on, but he gives zero navigational options to his thing. So as that interested reader, it's down to me to find the name of his thing [Mwmbl] and then (hilariously, given the context!) use a search engine (probably The Evil Google) to find HIS thing.
Seriously, people, if you're writing about anything at all, making assumptions is always a bad idea. If you're writing about a product, make it more than easy to get to it. Provide plentiful CTA's (that's Calls To Action, defined so as not to make the same mistake of assumption) - links, bittons, a big banner at the top: ("I'm building a non profit search engine called Mwmbl! Find out more").
IMO you also need an about page. Why are you doing this? Who are you? Why should the world pay attention? And stick them in your navigation. Overstate your cause rather than assume that people will get it. It's a rad product you're making! Don't undersell yourself! :-)
Seriously, people, if you're writing about anything at all, making assumptions is always a bad idea. If you're writing about a product, make it more than easy to get to it. Provide plentiful CTA's (that's Calls To Action, defined so as not to make the same mistake of assumption) - links, bittons, a big banner at the top: ("I'm building a non profit search engine called Mwmbl! Find out more").
K, thanks, </ moan >
[1] https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=31494925