More information would be needed for a certain answer, but if you want certificates for https, certbot is probably the easiest option. https://certbot.eff.org/
After you've obtained https certificates, you just have to configure your server/reverse proxy (probably apache or nginx) to redirect port 80 traffic to port 443, aka redirect non encrypted traffic to encrypted. Certbot can generally do this automatically, just look up instructions for your technology stack.
It looks like you just took the Intima theme for the home page and copied this example for a node.js chat.
Where is the encryption done and what type of encryption is used? I don't see an SSL certificate either.
EDIT: It actually looks like you just downloaded the source code directly from the tutorial link. The comments are still in tact and everything. All you did is change a couple words in the text.
Use the sample words / links then click the buttons. started as 'create link' because i was sick of doing this manually...
you might want to steal the link creation, remove dupse de-camel case, remove dupes or similar.
the grid was just for creative use, ie put in a heap of words and get the combinations of those words.
feel free to take all / none of it
I feel you man, I'm also a long time Evernote user who got sick of the web app on Ubuntu (especially with the recent redesign!).
I tried some other stuff but eventually settled on Geeknote, which is strictly for text notes. You can bring them up really quickly and you can even browse your notes as a directory tree in vim with this plugin! If you aren't a big fan of the command line I fear the web app is probably your best choice though.
We've just launched Quicklinkr 2.0 and we really think you'll dig it! http://quicklinkr.com is a place for you to manage, save and origanize your favorite links and news - think of it as a giant clipboard you can access anytime, anywhere and from any device.
Quicklinkr is completely FREE so please try it out and provide any feedback below or on twitter @quicklinkr
Decide where to start. Ruby on Rails has a pretty low barrier of entry.
If you want to learn web apps but don't know enough to ask more than, "where do I get started?", then Rails is as good a choice as any.