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2026/07

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11894 links · page 69 of 119


  • 2026-07-07
    Home | abhinavsarkar.net
    Abhinav Sarkar is a software engineer based in Bangalore, India whose site features deep technical blog posts on topics like Haskell parsers, compiler design, bytecode VMs, and developer tooling. Beyond code, the site also covers his personal interests including books, photography, and cycling, making it a rich and well-rounded personal corner of the web.
  • 2026-07-07
    Home | Ersei 'n Stuff
    Ersei is an HPC Solutions Engineer and Purdue CS graduate who shares expertise spanning reverse engineering, formal languages, computer security, and self-hosting across a personal site and blog. Visitors will find curated links to other tech blogs, open-source project contributions, and a technically deep personal presence from someone passionate about low-level systems work.
  • 2026-07-07
    Home | Gears
    Surya, known online as Gears, is an amateur software developer and core team member of the Gleam programming language who shares blog posts, talks, and projects centered on functional programming, compilers, and Minecraft datapacks. The site features technical writing on topics like bit arrays and test timeouts in Gleam, alongside links to YouTube videos, open-source libraries, and conference recordings.
  • 2026-07-07
    Home | wasabipesto.com
    Wasabipesto is an HVAC controls engineer who shares a diverse blog covering computing projects, data visualization, and personal essays on topics ranging from SSH tarpits to wedding planning. The site features original software projects like a prediction market calibration tool and a distributed search for square-cube pandigitals, making it a rich mix of technical depth and personal reflection.
  • 2026-07-07
    Home | Will Carhart
    Will Carhart is a software engineer in the San Francisco Bay Area who built this clean personal site to showcase his projects, background, and blog. The site focuses on back-end architectures, cloud infrastructures, and API development, making it a hub for his professional and technical presence.
  • 2026-07-07
    Home | Will Webberley
    Will Webberley is a Welsh technologist and PhD-holder whose personal site blends blog posts on software, open technologies, and data sovereignty with notes and links from his day-to-day technical life. Posts range from analysis of UK online safety legislation to hands-on guides for command-line email clients and home printing setups, making it a thoughtful read for technically minded visitors.
  • 2026-07-07
    home · andrés ignacio torres
    Andrés Ignacio Torres is a Venezuelan software engineer at Microsoft in Vancouver who writes about software development, cloud infrastructure, Kubernetes, Bluesky/Fediverse, and open source projects. The site blends technical blog posts with personal reflections, and also highlights his creative side as a writer of poetry and short fiction.
  • 2026-07-07
    home — inqlab
    The personal hub of pukkamustard, a developer who goes by the handle inqlab, featuring links to a blog, git repositories, and contact info across decentralized platforms like the Fediverse and XMPP. The site has a minimalist aesthetic with a Dadaist quote as its welcome text, hinting at a creative and philosophically curious personality behind the technical projects.
  • 2026-07-07
    Home • AndreGarzia.com
    Andre Alves Garzia is a Mozilla TechSpeaker and developer based in London whose blog covers web development, decentralisation technologies, and blogging tools alongside occasional recipes and creative writing. Posts range from technical experiments like no-build web applications and linkgraphs to personal snippets about TTRPG design and Lomochrome film photography.
  • 2026-07-07
    Home • Deloughry.co.uk
    Matthew Peck-Deloughry (aka Dr_DinoMight) is a full-stack developer with 15 years of experience who shares blog posts, projects, recipes, and playlists through a stylish terminal-aesthetic personal site. The dev-focused content covers AI, frontend development, web APIs, and personal reflections on the indie web, making it a compelling stop for fellow developers.
  • 2026-07-07
    home, eventually
    Rue04 is a young programmer and hobbyist from Lower Saxony, Germany who shares their interests in coding, music, abstract Blender art, physics, and mathematics. The site features a personal intro, a favorite-color shrine, links to cool people and creators, and a candid todo list revealing the site is still actively under construction.
  • 2026-07-07
    Homepage
    Astrid's personal tech site blends a blog, project showcase, and homelab diary with posts covering NixOS, IPv6 networking, Ansible, ham radio, and building a static site generator in Rust. The site radiates genuine hacker curiosity, complete with a swear counter, webring memberships, and a collection of custom 88x31 buttons.
  • 2026-07-07
    homepage - unnick :3
    Unnick's personal homepage is a lively collection of browser-based experiments and creative coding projects, including shader demos, physics simulations, a spacewar clone, and a noise generator. The site reflects a technically adventurous personality with interests in Zig programming, shaders, math, and open-source tools, plus a self-hosted Raspberry Pi and a welcoming offer to host others.
  • 2026-07-07
    Hook’s Humble Homepage
    Matija Šuklje, known online as Hook, writes at the intersection of free and open source software law, licensing, and hacker culture, bringing a lawyer's precision to the FOSS world. Posts range from copyright and licensing proposals like REUSE.software and the Fiduciary License Agreement to KDE integration projects and the occasional musing on tea, sailing, or Slovene grammar.
  • 2026-07-07
    House
    House is a research project from Portland State University demonstrating a full operating system written in Haskell, showcasing how a high-level functional language can handle low-level system programming including device drivers, graphics, and networking. Developed by Thomas Hallgren, Andrew Tolmach, Iavor Diatchki, and others, it includes screenshots, downloadable source, and links to the accompanying ICFP 2005 paper for those interested in OS construction in functional languages.
  • 2026-07-07
    How Does a Database Work? | Let’s Build a Simple Database
    Created by cstack, this site documents the process of building a SQLite clone from scratch in C, walking through 14+ parts covering topics like B-trees, binary search, disk persistence, and SQL compilation. It is an in-depth technical tutorial that answers fundamental questions about how databases actually work under the hood.
  • 2026-07-07
    HQ | Faewulf's Basement
    Faewulf's Basement is the personal developer hub of a self-described novice-to-competent programmer who showcases their skills across languages like C++, JavaScript, TypeScript, Python, and more. Visitors can explore a portfolio of quirky projects including a Boids simulation, a Tarot item generator, and a Bonsai API, alongside a blog, music list, and a retro terminal-style chat interface.
  • 2026-07-07
    Hrvoje Šimić
    Hrvoje Šimić, a Croatian web developer known as Shime, shares years of programming insights, TIL (Today I Learned) notes, and personal reflections spanning Ruby on Rails, Git, Neovim, and software development philosophy. The blog blends technical how-tos with thoughtful essays on writing, habits, and productivity, making it a compelling read for developers who appreciate both code and ideas.
  • 2026-07-07
    Hrǽw
    Hrǽw is Mika Naylor's personal project tracker and information repository, cataloguing nearly 800 hours of productive work across dozens of self-built software projects. From a meal planning app and weather station to an Android scrum tool and a cyberpunk game, this site offers a fascinating window into one prolific developer's creative output.
  • 2026-07-07
    I'm Answering the (Bear) Blog Questions Challenge · Just Some Code
    Cesar Aguirre's software engineering blog covers coding, unit testing, and developer career advice drawn from years of professional experience. The site blends technical tutorials with personal reflections on how blogging itself accelerated his growth as a developer and helped him land jobs.
  • 2026-07-07
    Illusion Slopes | Illusion Slopes
    Max Kapur's blog covers numerical optimization, operations research, and software development with posts that apply mathematical algorithms to surprisingly fun problems like reality TV matchmaking games. The writing bridges technical depth and cultural curiosity, making it a compelling read for anyone interested in applied math and programming.
  • 2026-07-07
    Index - Ghettos of Abu Nawas
    The personal blog of a software engineer writing under the name 'Ghettos of Abu Nawas,' featuring deep technical posts on Erlang, distributed systems, BEAM internals, and Kubernetes alongside travel fieldnotes from Iraq, Syria, Algeria, and beyond. The mix of rigorous CS writing, personal reflection, and international travel logs makes this a distinctive and wide-ranging technical blog worth bookmarking.
  • 2026-07-07
    Index @ osmarks' website
    Osmarks runs a technically dense personal site covering AI, machine learning, deep learning accelerators, software-defined radios, and Linux tinkering, with long-form essays ranging from pragmatic hardware guides to speculative tech commentary. Highlights include a custom meme search engine scaled to 230 million images, a personal data warehouse project, and opinionated writing on topics like sparse autoencoders, autocrafting algorithms, and cheap ML workstation builds.
  • 2026-07-07
    index – aethopica
    Arcade Wise's personal Memex at aethopica serves as a portal to their work in programming languages, systems of communication, and experimental mathematics. The site links out to projects, a resume, and Fediverse presence, reflecting the aesthetics and values of the Merveilles community.
  • 2026-07-07
    Indie GameDev Gaiden
    Indie GameDev Gaiden is a curated link directory for aspiring and independent game developers, covering everything from physics and AI to rendering, audio, pixel art, and game design history. The collection spans tutorials, deep-dive articles, and dev stories on topics like behavior trees, collision detection, OpenGL, and the making of classics like Diablo II and Crash Bandicoot.
  • 2026-07-07
    Interdependent Thoughts – by Ton Zijlstra
    Ton Zijlstra's long-running personal blog 'Interdependent Thoughts' explores technology, AI, knowledge management, and the IndieWeb from a thoughtful, interdisciplinary perspective. With posts dating back to 2002 and a digital garden alongside the blog, it offers a rich archive of reflections on how humans and organizations interact with emerging technologies.
  • 2026-07-07
    Internet Explorer 6
    A novelty JavaScript experiment by mrdoob that recreates the infamous broken-rendering experience of Internet Explorer 6 as a humorous visual effect in a modern browser. It captures the nostalgic frustration of the old web era in a tongue-in-cheek interactive demo.
  • 2026-07-07
    InvoxiPlayGames
    Emma (InvoxiPlayGames) is a hobbyist reverse engineer, security researcher, and developer who specializes in modding and homebrewing old tech like the Xbox 360, Rock Band 3, and iOS devices. Her project portfolio spans C#, C, C++, and more, with highlights including RB3Enhanced, FreeMyXe, and numerous open-source tools hosted on GitHub.
  • 2026-07-07
    Jack Platten
    Jack Platten's personal site and blog covers technical topics like self-hosting, ActivityPub/ATProto infrastructure, and web development projects. Recent posts dig into deploying a Bluesky PDS with Podman and building a custom comments API, making it a solid read for developers interested in decentralized social tech.
  • 2026-07-07
    Jacob's Software Projects
    Jacob Vosmaer's software portfolio collects dozens of open-source projects spanning MIDI firmware, DIY synthesizer tools, audio codecs, and programming language implementations. The breadth is impressive, with projects in C, C++, Go, Ruby, and Objective-C covering everything from Yamaha DX7 sysex utilities to a Forth-like language and Linux kernel modules.
  • 2026-07-07
    Jae "J4" Salokettu
    Jae 'J4' Salokettu is a Finnish DevOps consultant and software engineer based in Helsinki, with deep involvement in open-source software, GitLab, BGP networking, and the Resonite VR platform. The site serves as a hub linking to their blog, code repositories, amateur radio callsign (OH2DND), and public infrastructure documentation.
  • 2026-07-07
    Jahan's site
    Jahan Rashidi's personal site covers a mix of programming projects, constructed languages (artlangs), photography, dreams, and random musings. The 'artlangs' section in particular stands out as a niche interest, making this a curious blend of technical and creative hobbyist content.
  • 2026-07-07
    Jan Tuomi
    Jan Tuomi is a Finland-based senior software engineer who shares a personal blog and digital garden covering home server builds, software tinkering, electronics, and life updates. The site features a linklog of curated bookmarks, a 'now' page, and hobby project writeups, all presented with a minimalist, pragmatic philosophy.
  • 2026-07-07
    jared forth
    Jared Forth's personal site spans music, photography, software, and a blog, presenting a multi-faceted creative and technical profile in a clean, minimal layout. Photography appears as a primary featured interest alongside music and software development, making this a polished hub for his creative output.
  • 2026-07-07
    JasonGorman - Programming - UK
    Jason Gorman is a UK-based software engineer who writes technical articles covering JavaScript, performance optimization, SQLite, and engineering principles. The site features a focused archive of programming tutorials and deep-dive posts aimed at developers building reliable, scalable software.
  • 2026-07-07
    JavaScript Systems Music
    Tero Parviainen's in-depth tutorial guides readers through recreating landmark minimal and ambient music works by Steve Reich and Brian Eno using the Web Audio API and JavaScript. The guide walks through building phase music and generative loop systems step by step, making it a rich resource for developers curious about audio programming and algorithmic composition.
  • 2026-07-07
    JavaScript-FX
    JavaScript-FX offers a collection of object-oriented JavaScript and DHTML effects including animated rollovers, link faders, slide menus, and mouse trail scripts. What sets it apart is its emphasis on OO methods, allowing multiple instances of the same script on a single page and easy combination of effects.
  • 2026-07-07
    JBs Powershell
    Script to extract disk space usage through WMI: JB's PowerShell is a technical blog by Jakob Bindslet collecting practical PowerShell scripts for system administrators, including WMI queries for disk space monitoring across servers and clusters. Each post shares ready-to-use code snippets with real-world utility, making it a handy reference for Windows scripting tasks.
  • 2026-07-07
    jeena.net
    Jeena is a software engineer living in South Korea who shares blog essays, short notes, photos, and podcasts across a richly divided personal website. Beyond coding and game development, Jeena brews beer, dries meat, plays metal music, and documents family life, making this a genuinely eclectic and personal corner of the web.
  • 2026-07-07
    Jeni's XSLT Pages
    Jeni Tennison's comprehensive reference site dedicated to XSLT, the XML-based transformation language, offering tutorials, book recommendations, and curated solutions drawn from the XSL-List mailing list. Jeni has authored three books on XSLT and XPath, and the site covers everything from fundamentals to advanced topics like namespace handling, keys, and XPath expressions.
  • 2026-07-07
    jmoney
    Jaiden's personal site doubles as a learning journal and project showcase, covering tech, fantasy, and whatever else catches their interest. Visitors can browse posts, explore linked GitHub projects, and leave a note in the guestbook.
  • 2026-07-07
    Joe Lothan
    Joe Lothan's personal technical blog focuses on cybersecurity topics including CTF (Capture the Flag) challenges, firmware exploitation, and low-level system hacking. Posts cover hands-on topics like UEFI firmware emulation, Mikrotik authentication analysis, and Android debug shell tools, making it a solid resource for security enthusiasts.
  • 2026-07-07
    John Colagioia
    John Colagioia's personal hub collects his many projects including software development, teaching, and writing, with links to his active blog 'Entropy Arbitrage' and various code repositories. Visitors will find a well-rounded technologist who builds open-source tools, posts daily coding updates, and contributes to communities like Codidact and The Practical Dev.
  • 2026-07-07
    John Holdun
    John Holdun is a Los Angeles-based software engineer, electronic musician, and immersive artist who shares his work through a personal site with blog posts and project showcases. The site serves as a hub for his diverse creative and technical output, making it a worthwhile stop for those interested in the intersection of code, music, and art.
  • 2026-07-07
    John Shutt's Home Page
    John Shutt's academic homepage at Worcester Polytechnic Institute covers his computer science work, including his master's thesis on adaptive grammars and course materials for CS4123. The site offers a glimpse into late 1990s and early 2000s academic web culture, with links to WPI's CS department and sections for both academic work and personal web surfing.
  • 2026-07-07
    John Skiles Skinner
    John Skiles Skinner is a software engineer and writer whose homepage highlights his work at the Freedom of the Press Foundation on SecureDrop, a whistleblower communication tool, as well as past roles at 18F and Cornell University Library. His writing spans outlets like The Washington Post, Salon, and 2600 Magazine, and he is an active Wikipedia contributor with over 60 articles.
  • 2026-07-07
    John's Combinatory Logic Playground
    John Tromp's deep-dive into lambda calculus and combinatory logic features his binary lambda calculus (BLC) interpreter, self-interpreter encodings, and related theoretical computer science research. Visitors will find downloadable interpreters in Perl and C, academic papers, graphical notation for BLC programs, and connections to Kolmogorov complexity and algorithmic information theory.
  • 2026-07-07
    jonesangga's page
    Jonesangga's personal page showcases projects in creative coding, mathematics visualization, and Vim, with tutorials and demos built in JavaScript and C. The site reflects a curious programmer's journey through computer graphics, game development, and retro computing, with active blog posts and participation in events like Genuary 2025.
  • 2026-07-07
    Josh Beckman's Organization
    Josh Beckman's personal knowledge garden collects years of writing, notes, and reading highlights built and shared in the open. He writes primarily about software craft, open-source development, and tools like Claude Code, making it a thoughtful resource for developers interested in the intersection of building and reflection.
  • 2026-07-07
    Joshua Shaffer
    Joshua Shaffer's personal site blends programming projects, recipes, crochet references, and jokes into a compact but eclectic homepage, complete with a procedurally generated canvas element. The site is accessible via I2P, Tor, and standard HTTP, and participates in the Retronaut and Hotline webrings, giving it a distinct indie-web flavor.
  • 2026-07-07
    JS-909
    JS-909 is a browser-based drum machine built entirely in JavaScript, recreating the classic Roland TR-909 rhythm composer with playable pads for kick, snare, hi-hats, bongos, and clap. It doubles as an interactive experiment showcasing what JavaScript audio and visualization can do in the browser.
  • 2026-07-07
    JS1k - The JavaScript code golfing competition
    JS1k is a JavaScript code golfing competition that ran from 2010 to 2019, challenging developers to create impressive demos in under 1 kilobyte of JavaScript. Each year featured a unique theme such as Dragons, Magic, and Coin Mine, with entries archived and browsable by competition round.
  • 2026-07-07
    Just For Fun
    Just For Fun is a curated showcase of creative coding projects, featuring delightful experiments like a Windows 95 parody, minimalist coding environments, and CSS-powered 3D clouds. It highlights the playful, artistic side of programming with a handpicked collection of web-based interactive curiosities.
  • 2026-07-07
    jzhao.xyz
    Jacky Zhao's digital garden explores agentic and communal technology, with over 700 notes and 20+ essays on software infrastructure, web agency, and the philosophy of building tools that empower people. Built with Quartz and rooted in ideas about how technology can give residents of the web the same power as its architects, it's a rich and thoughtfully curated hypertext space.
  • 2026-07-07
    Katemonkey (In Most Places)
    Kate Bolin (katemonkey) chronicles her journey learning Python, web development fundamentals, and HTML and CSS through online courses, with candid reflections on progress, frustration, and occasional wins. The blog blends technical learning logs with personal commentary and a fun daily sticker feature, making it an endearing document of one developer's skill-building process.
  • 2026-07-07
    Katherine Yang
    Katherine Yang is an artist and programmer who describes herself as a 'poetic programmer,' building tools that sit at the intersection of code, language, and poetry. Her site showcases creative projects, blog-style thesis statements, and an intentionally crafted web presence that itself feels like a piece of art.
  • 2026-07-07
    Kaveh
    Kaveh's personal website, run by developer hamidrezakp, serves as a home base for blog posts about personal projects and hobbies with a technical lean. The site is still getting started with content but connects visitors to the creator's GitHub and social profiles, and participates in the Hotline Webring.
  • 2026-07-07
    Kenneth Pirman
    Kenneth Pirman is a linguist-turned-programmer obsessed with procedural world-generation, showcasing open-source projects like Geomancer, World Synth, and Hello Terrain that simulate tectonic plates, climates, and planetary landscapes using WebGPU and Three.js. The site pairs a project portfolio with a thoughtful blog exploring what makes virtual places feel real, making it a fascinating stop for anyone interested in generative geography and creative coding.
  • 2026-07-07
    Kim Grytøyr
    Kim Grytøyr is a senior software developer from Norway whose personal site blends technical guides, movie and book reviews, short notes, and personal posts into a thoughtful ongoing journal. Quick links to Ubuntu server setup guides and other developer tips sit alongside more personal entries about his Standard Poodle and music collection habits, making it a pleasantly eclectic corner of the web.
  • 2026-07-07
    Klimson
    Klimson's personal developer site serves as a hub for a Polish programmer, featuring links to projects, a blog about things they find interesting, and a contact page. The site showcases GitHub projects and participates in the Hotline Webring, reflecting its roots in the indie web community.
  • 2026-07-07
    konpyujiru
    Konpyujiru is a personal neocities site by dxcccii that collects resources from their computer science degree alongside creative personal content like games pages, spicy food reviews, and the charming pixel-room project 'Teeny Towers.' The site has grown steadily since 2020 with a cozy old-web aesthetic, custom cursors, 88x31 buttons, and a curated links section full of interesting corners of the internet.
  • 2026-07-07
    krzysckh.org
    The personal homepage of krzysckh, a prolific programmer who has built an impressive array of open-source software projects including Lisp compilers, a chess engine, a lambda-calculus reducer, a UXN emulator, and a web framework. The site blends a software portfolio with a personal blog, reading list, coffee opinions, and a curated set of links to interesting corners of the web.
  • 2026-07-07
    Lartunet
    Lartunet is the personal corner of Lartu, a developer who builds videogames, programming languages, and software tools like the static site generator Makompile and the online adventure game Eterspire. The site is a charming Web 1.0-inspired hub with a table of contents, a curated links list, and a log of projects spanning games, code, and low-tech web creativity.
  • 2026-07-07
    Laurent Gaffié blog
    Windows 7 / Server 2008R2 Remote Kernel Crash: Laurent Gaffié's security research blog documents a critical Windows 7 and Server 2008R2 remote kernel crash vulnerability he discovered, triggered via an SMB protocol flaw requiring no credentials. The post includes a full advisory, proof-of-concept Python exploit code, and sharp commentary on Microsoft's Security Development Lifecycle failures.
  • 2026-07-07
    Lazy Foo' Productions - Starting out on Game Programming
    Lazy Foo' Productions is a comprehensive game programming tutorial site covering SDL and OpenGL, aimed at C++ developers learning to build 2D games from scratch. The site includes structured tutorials, articles on topics like state machines and AI basics, and practical advice on scoping beginner projects to avoid common pitfalls.
  • 2026-07-07
    leanrada.com
    Lean Rada is a software engineer based in Sydney who documents his creative coding projects, generative art experiments, and technical notes on everything from QMK firmware to CSS-powered AI games. The site showcases an impressive range of passion projects including an interactive Philippine language map, augmented reality generative art, and a Baybayin calligraphy generator.
  • 2026-07-07
    leap123
    Leap (also known as Azzam) is a 15-year-old autistic programmer and content creator from Indonesia who shares projects, a blog, and links to friends and fellow creators. The site highlights a tinkerer spirit with connections to the indie web community, webrings, and a growing list of personal projects built with tools like 11ty.
  • 2026-07-07
    Learning C# by Example
    A comprehensive tutorial site covering C# programming by example, walking through everything from Hello World basics to advanced topics like threads, XML/XSLT, generics, and new language features across versions 2.0 through 7.x. Part of a larger multi-language reference by fincher.org, it also covers Ruby, Java, JavaScript, Perl, PowerShell, and more, making it a handy quick-reference for developers picking up new languages.
  • 2026-07-07
    Leon Mika
    Leon Mika is a Melbourne-based software engineer who shares frequent short and long-form posts about his indie software projects, including Android app development, custom blogging CMS tools, and the indie web community. His devlogs cover real-world coding challenges with tools like Flutter, Gradle, and Java, making it a genuinely interesting read for fellow developers tinkering on personal projects.
  • 2026-07-07
    Leonora Tindall | Nora Codes
    Leonora (Nora) Tindall is a software developer who shares long-form writing, tutorials, and projects on topics ranging from JavaScript techniques to infrastructure photography. The site reflects a wide range of interests including filk music, tabletop games, amateur radio (KK6GET), and queer community building, with a distinctly hacker-culture aesthetic.
  • 2026-07-07
    lily's treehouse
    Lily is a UK-based student and programmer who shares her passion for tinkering with older hardware, building web scrapers, and developing Minecraft plugins and mods in Kotlin. Her personal homepage highlights her love of web technologies like React and Astro while also expressing a nostalgic fondness for the simpler early web.
  • 2026-07-07
    lina.sh
    Lina is an 18-year-old developer from Leipzig who built this terminal-styled personal site entirely without JavaScript, including a live Spotify status widget. Her notable project, CUII-liste, exposed secret website blocking cooperations between German ISPs and companies, earning coverage from TorrentFreak, Heise, and netzpolitik.org.
  • 2026-07-07
    Links - Three till Seven
    Sarah Vessels runs this personal site centered on programming, espresso, and everyday grumbling, with a links page collecting bookmarks, friends' sites, and social profiles. The site participates in the Hotline Webring and has a pleasantly minimal old-web feel with a small but curated set of connections.
  • 2026-07-07
    llimllib notes
    Bill Mill's personal notes site is a sprawling Obsidian-generated knowledge base covering programming, AI tools, data visualization, computer usage tips, and more. With nearly 3000 links spanning topics from Rust and Go to CLI tools and interactive explainers, it reads like a working developer's externalized brain made public.
  • 2026-07-07
    Lovis
    Lovis Rentsch's personal homepage showcasing his passion for FOSS, Rust, NixOS, and esoteric array programming languages like uiua and Haskell. The site itself is built with Rust and WebAssembly and doubles as a playground for browser experiments, featuring a project portfolio, guestbook, and a blog in both English and German.
  • 2026-07-07
    Lucio's Rambles
    Lucio's Rambles is the personal blog of an aspiring game developer, covering a wide mix of topics from tech news and local politics to everyday life observations. The site is refreshingly candid, with no promises of consistency or coherence, just honest posts from someone with a lot on their mind.
  • 2026-07-07
    Luis Quintanilla - Personal Website
    Luis Quintanilla's personal website is a richly populated hub covering technology, AI, open-source tools, and internet culture, with blog posts, notes, reviews, bookmarks, and a sprawling blogroll. The site reflects a developer's perspective on topics like self-hosting, chat platforms, and AI agents, making it a great stop for tech-minded readers looking for thoughtful commentary and curated resources.
  • 2026-07-07
    lunacb's funky site
    Luna (lunacb) runs this minimalist personal site centered on programming projects, with a chaotic bookmarks collection and a blog. Notably multi-protocol, the site is accessible via HTML, Gopher, and Gemini, reflecting a genuine interest in alternative internet protocols.
  • 2026-07-07
    MacKiDo/Dojo/SoYouWantToProgram
    David K. Every's humorous and candid guide walks aspiring programmers through what the profession is really like, covering programmer culture, attitudes, and what to expect when starting out. Part of the larger MacKiDo reference site, this article blends sharp wit with practical insight to give beginners an honest (and entertaining) introduction to the programming world.
  • 2026-07-07
    Made with Tea
    Jendrik Poloczek: Jendrik Poloczek's personal blog covers his work at the intersection of AI, Bitcoin, crypto infrastructure, and software engineering, drawing on his background at companies like Coinbase and Greenfield Capital. Posts range from deep technical topics like Kafka Streams and Ethereum nodes to personal reflections on minimalism, cold showers, and sailing.
  • 2026-07-07
    maia website
    Maia is a Swiss fox who shares her personal corner of the web, covering her interests in programming (TypeScript, Rust, Python), gaming (Minecraft, TF2, Garry's Mod), and electronic music including DJing. The site is a work in progress with a handful of blog posts and a friendly links section connecting to other personal sites in the small-web community.
  • 2026-07-07
    Mail::RFC822::Address
    Paul Warren's project page for Mail::RFC822::Address, a Perl module that validates email addresses against the RFC 822 grammar using regular expressions rather than a parser, making it significantly faster to load. The page includes a download link, documentation, an online tester, and a fascinatingly complex auto-generated regular expression that illustrates just how intricate RFC 822 email validation really is.
  • 2026-07-07
    Main
    Andreas Muller's creative coding portfolio showcases experimental interactive projects built with Java, C++, OpenGL, and SDL, including visual toys like CircleClock, Particles1, VideoCubes, and ImageAsPixels. The site is a playground of generative graphics and algorithmic art experiments, many still in alpha, reflecting a hands-on developer pushing the boundaries of real-time visuals.
  • 2026-07-07
    manuel.is
    Manuel González (spavi) runs this personal blog covering technical topics like Emacs, Ruby, OpenSSL, and HTTP headers alongside life reflections and year-in-review posts. The mix of developer-focused writing and personal ramblings makes it a genuine slice of a working programmer's life over several years.
  • 2026-07-07
    Mapgen2
    Red Blob Games presents Mapgen2, an interactive procedural map generator that creates volcanic island-style terrain using Delaunay triangulation and custom biome algorithms originally built for the game Realm of the Mad God. Visitors can explore hundreds of unique island shapes by tweaking seed values, save high-resolution images, and dig into the open-source JavaScript code behind the generator.
  • 2026-07-07
    Marc Duperrier home page
    Marc Duperrier's professional homepage showcases his extensive credentials as a Network and System Security Engineer, including CISSP, MCSE, MCDBA, and CCNA certifications. Visitors can browse his online resume, download a CV in.doc or.pdf format, and review the books and achievements that shaped his career in information security.
  • 2026-07-07
    Mark Hernandez (lion-byte)
    Mark Hernandez (lion-byte) is a software developer's personal site and blog focusing on NodeJS, web development, and related tech topics. The site also reflects his broader personality as a self-described gaymer and open-source contributor, with links to his GitHub, Mastodon, Bluesky, and Twitch profiles.
  • 2026-07-07
    Massimiliano Lambertini's smanett.one -- - Home
    Max Lambertini, a seasoned Oracle DBA with a passion for coding, shares notes and projects covering web development tools like Astro and Eleventy, Oracle database administration, and small utilities written in Go and Python. The site blends technical blog posts with open-source tools, making it a useful stop for developers interested in static site generators, database tips, and hobbyist programming projects.
  • 2026-07-07
    Mauricio Poppe notes | Mauricio Poppe
    Mauricio Poppe is a NYC-based Software Engineer sharing notes on Kubernetes, data visualization, mathematics, and creative coding projects like 3D convex hulls and Three.js demos. The site blends technical depth with personal pursuits including language learning, bachata dancing, and open-source tools like function-plot and interval arithmetic.
  • 2026-07-07
    Maurits van Riezen
    Maurits van Riezen, a software developer known as Mousetail, showcases his projects including a competitive code-golf platform, a Pygame game, a Catan tournament bot with over 1,200 ranked players, and various web tools. The site also features technical articles on concurrency models and game development, plus participation in several webrings.
  • 2026-07-07
    Mehul Kar
    Mehul Kar is a software engineer at Vercel who writes extensively about web development, JavaScript tooling, package management, and engineering practices. His blog spans over a decade of technical posts covering topics like Node.js, TypeScript, npm, CI/CD workflows, and developer experience.
  • 2026-07-07
    Michael Wolf
    Michael Wolf is a Cincinnati-based systems enthusiast and dev-ops professional who shares a wide range of projects spanning peer-to-peer networking, floppy disk archiving, film projector hacking, and electronics alongside personal essays and a photo roll. The site blends technical depth with genuine personality, offering everything from a published IEEE paper to linocut experiments and game-of-the-year write-ups.
  • 2026-07-07
    Michal Skoula/
    Michal Skoula is a Moravian developer showcasing his portfolio of software projects, including indie games built with C# and MonoGame, an e-shop platform, and an AI-powered fairy tale generator. The site also features a blog covering topics like 3D printing troubleshooting, Docker tools, and Xbox development observations.
  • 2026-07-07
    Miguel Carneiro
    Miguel Carneiro is a software and infrastructure engineer from Porto, Portugal, who shares his portfolio of projects ranging from public transit tools to uBlock Origin filters. The page catalogs a decade-plus of work including mobile-friendly transit apps, donation platforms, and open-source utilities, with links to source code and archives.
  • 2026-07-07
    miiichaelll | Michael's Cold Corner | CS Researcher
    Michael's Cold Corner is the personal Neocities site of a computer science senior and security researcher specializing in web application security, penetration testing, and low-level programming. Visitors can learn about his work in binary analysis, malware research, kernel engineering, and his ongoing project to build a graphical simulation inside a C kernel.
  • 2026-07-07
    Mika Feiler - homepage
    Mika Feiler is a 25-year-old software engineer and trans woman who shares her personal homepage with links to her GitHub, Mastodon, personal wiki, and a curated collection of small web links. The page has a distinctly hacker-adjacent aesthetic, with selfies from hackerspaces and transit, reflecting a life at the intersection of tech culture and indie web sensibilities.
  • 2026-07-07
    Mike English
    Mike English's personal homepage serves as a hub linking to his blog, GitHub, LinkedIn, and Mastodon profiles, suggesting a developer or tech professional presence. The site is minimal but points to active technical community involvement across multiple platforms.
  • 2026-07-07
    Mirek Długosz personal website
    Mirek Długosz is a software engineer and open source enthusiast who shares technical findings, opinions, and experience reports on topics like Python, Rust, automated testing, and software deployment. The blog features thoughtful deep-dives into real-world engineering challenges, making it a useful read for developers interested in practical software craftsmanship.
  • 2026-07-07
    mitxela.com
    Mitxela's personal site collects a mix of technical projects, rants, and miscellaneous content from a maker and programmer with a playful, no-nonsense attitude. The site is known for deep dives into electronics, custom hardware builds, and creative coding experiments.
  • 2026-07-07
    mmatt.net
    Matt's personal homepage showcases his life as a computer science student at MTSU and part-time technologist for teal.fm, with live stats tracking his car's fuel and range via a custom animated display. The site aggregates his latest blog posts, Bluesky activity, and music plays, reflecting a tech-savvy creator comfortable building interactive web tools around his daily life.

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