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Link Dump

...i found this and dropped it here.

today: 1 | this month: 11894 | latest: 2026-07-12 | total: 17088


  • 2026-07-07
    Beyond anything you can do
    Thunix: Hosted on Thunix, this site offers a collection of practical Linux and Unix tutorials covering topics like Tar backups, Blender rendering, OpenSSH, digital image tools, and audio/video conversion. It serves as a handy reference hub for command-line users and open-source enthusiasts looking for concise how-to guides.
  • 2026-07-07
    BOOTLEG BLOG
    Bootleg Blog is a personal blog by a Linux enthusiast who codes their site on a Linux desktop and covers a wide range of mature and touchy subjects, both fictional and real-world. The site features a distinctive aesthetic with explicit content warnings and thoughtful mental health messaging woven into its landing page.
  • 2026-07-07
    but she's a girl...
    Run by bsag, a biologist and self-described nerd based in Birmingham, UK, this long-running personal blog covers NixOS tinkering, custom keyboards, backup strategies, and everyday life with genuine depth and warmth. Posts range from technical deep-dives into Linux configuration and restic backups to personal reflections, making it a cozy corner of the web for fellow Linux enthusiasts.
  • 2026-07-07
    CalmBookish's nutshell
    CalmBookish's personal corner of the web includes a blog, contact info, and a notable focus on technology choices, particularly Nix or NixOS based on the webring participation. The site is part of the Nix Webring, signaling a community of users interested in the Nix ecosystem and declarative system configuration.
  • 2026-07-07
    Can I finally start using Wayland in 2026? - Michael Stapelberg
    Michael Stapelberg, creator of the i3 tiling window manager, documents his annual attempt to fully migrate from X11 to Wayland in 2026, covering hardware quirks, NixOS configuration, and compatibility testing across tools like sway, Emacs, Chrome, and foot. The post is a detailed technical deep-dive with screenshots and findings on font rendering, screensharing, scaling glitches, and IPC automation that will resonate with any Linux power user eyeing the same transition.
  • 2026-07-07
    Captain's Log
    Captain's Log is a personal technical blog packed with concise, practical tips covering Linux administration, SSH, KVM/libvirt virtualization, systemd, networking, and retro emulation tools like QEMU and 86Box. Posts span from 2018 to 2025, offering a useful archive of command-line solutions and sysadmin tricks accumulated over years of hands-on experience.
  • 2026-07-07
    chrark
    Chrark's personal homepage is a hub for decentralized internet enthusiasts, featuring links to Tildeverse communities, federated social platforms, and alternative frontends. The site highlights a Minetest mod project and profiles across Fediverse, XMPP, Matrix, and IRC networks, making it a great gateway into the indie and open-source internet community.
  • 2026-07-07
    chtc
    The personal homepage of chtc, a self-described internet denizen with a passion for Linux (NixOS specifically), music, films, and games. The site links out to a rich set of profiles including Last.fm, Letterboxd, Discogs, and AniList, painting a picture of someone deeply engaged with tracking their media consumption.
  • 2026-07-07
    chötrin's wiki.
    Chötrin's self-hosted wiki is a digital garden of personal notes published with vimwiki and served from a Raspberry Pi inside a hexagonal end table, covering programming languages like 6502 assembly, Ada, and Zig alongside operating systems such as OpenBSD, Plan 9, and Haiku. The site also branches into NES gaming, watercolor art, a homebrew NES game project, bicycling, and a curated collection of readings and recommendations that reflects a thoughtful, minimalist computing philosophy.
  • 2026-07-07
    coffeeknife@nekoweb.org:~$
    Coffeeknife's personal site is styled as a Linux terminal prompt, reflecting a clear love of tech and open-source culture. The site covers technology, media, crafts, and a blog, but the dominant aesthetic and branding lean heavily into Linux and command-line culture.
  • 2026-07-07
    Comfort On The Command Line - Comfort On The Command Line
    Gabriel Guzman's beginner-friendly blog walks readers through the Unix/Linux command line with approachable, conversational tutorials covering man pages, file searching, shell usage, and basic commands. Topics like ls, find, bash, and directory navigation are explained with humor and clarity, making the terminal feel welcoming to newcomers.
  • 2026-07-07
    Command Line Kung Fu
    Command Line Kung Fu is a long-running blog by contributors Ed Skoudis, Hal Pomeranz, and Tim Medin, delivering tips, tricks, and practical techniques for working with the command line across Linux, OS X, and Windows. With over 180 episodes covering everything from shell scripting to security tools, it is a rich reference for anyone who spends time at a terminal.
  • 2026-07-07
    CozyNet Blog
    CozyNet Blog is a personal tech blog covering Linux distributions, desktop environments like Trinity and GNOME, networking tools like ProtonVPN, and general life updates. The author digs into practical topics such as running Ubuntu, configuring yt-dlp, and thoughts on web development philosophy, making it a cozy corner of the internet for Linux enthusiasts.
  • 2026-07-07
    Creating System Users And Groups
    A technical reference page by RJK covering how to create system users and groups across multiple UNIX platforms including Linux, Solaris, FreeBSD, OpenBSD, and Mac OS X. It details platform-specific commands and quirks for sysadmins who need to automate user creation in scripts for isolating services.
  • 2026-07-07
    creative chaos - creative chaos
    The personal blog of Deni Bačić, known online as b4d and s55db, a senior Linux admin and HPC sysop with experience at research institutions and tech organizations. The site covers a minimalist geek lifestyle touching on Linux, infosec, networking, server administration, and ham radio.
  • 2026-07-07
    Crystal's Website 💜
    Crystal is a 19-year-old Algerian hobbyist who hosts this open-source personal site on the tilde.institute pubNIX server, running Gentoo Linux with a detailed setup including a Dell P7510, Doom Emacs, and Plasma6. The site leans heavily into the indie web and Linux culture aesthetic, featuring blinkies, a guestbook, anti-corporate web badges, and notes on her computing environment alongside random thoughts and class notes.
  • 2026-07-07
    Cybrkyd
    Cybrkyd is a personal tech blog covering Linux tips, self-hosted tools, privacy-focused software, and everyday computing life. Posts range from practical how-tos on Tor Browser cursor themes and Git workflows to commentary on ISP censorship and open-source alternatives to mainstream apps.
  • 2026-07-07
    deepend — satellite
    Mike 'deepend' is a sysadmin and web developer from Alberta, Canada who operates tilde.club, thunix.net, and the NewNet IRC network, keeping retro-web community infrastructure running. His personal satellite page showcases his open-source projects including a PHP wiki, a shell community platform, and a Tildeverse banner exchange, all served with hand-rolled HTML and a CRT-style aesthetic.
  • 2026-07-07
    deepend — tilde.club
    Mike 'deepend' is the operator of tilde.club and thunix.net, sharing his work running Linux-based shell communities, IRC networks, and hand-rolled PHP projects for the tildeverse. A no-frills, retro-web personal page that doubles as a hub for his open-source infrastructure work, including a banner exchange, wiki, and the NewNet IRC network.
  • 2026-07-07
    DigitalVoid
    DigitalVoid is a personal hub by the creator 'digitalvoid_' featuring a cozy, old-web aesthetic complete with a Comfy Fireplace Pepe, Linux and Debian badges, and a no-cookies, no-copyright philosophy. The site serves as a central launchpad for the creator's blog, links, and other web submissions with a distinctly retro, free-and-open-web spirit.
  • 2026-07-07
    DistroWatch.com
    Put the fun back into computing. Use Linux, BSD.: DistroWatch is the definitive reference for tracking Linux and BSD distributions, offering news, release announcements, package comparisons, and a famous page-hit ranking that serves as a popularity index for hundreds of distros. Whether you are a seasoned sysadmin or a curious newcomer, the site's beginner guides, weekly newsletter, and exhaustive distribution database make it an indispensable hub for the open-source OS community.
  • 2026-07-07
    Diyar Ciftci 🇵🇸
    Diyar Ciftci's personal site doubles as a privacy-focused infrastructure hub, offering mirrors of projects like the Tor Project and Rsync, alongside self-hosted services accessible via clearnet, Tor, and I2P. Blog posts tackle topics like Cloudflare criticism, package management, and free speech, reflecting a strong interest in open networks and internet freedom.
  • 2026-07-07
    Dragon’s notes | Posts about IT, photography and bicycles.
    Eugene Andrienko's personal tech blog covers FreeBSD, NetBSD, and Linux topics with detailed how-to guides on everything from configuring X11 to installing open-source firmware on ThinkPads. The site also features photography collections and occasional bicycle content, but the dominant focus is clearly Unix-like operating systems and open-source software.
  • 2026-07-07
    drkhsh
    The personal hub of drkhsh, an anarchist cyberpunk hacker and programmer who documents their open-source projects, Unix ricing setups, ASCII/ANSI textmode art, and rave culture. The site connects to a wiki, git repositories, a blog, and textmode art gallery, with a strong focus on privacy, decentralized networks, and obscure operating systems.
  • 2026-07-07
    Dynebolic | Liberate yourself from mental slavery and try something different on your computer.
    Dynebolic is a 100% free GNU+Linux live distribution created by the Dyne.org foundation, designed to run from a USB stick with no installation required and a focus on multimedia production for those who cannot afford expensive equipment. Built around principles of digital freedom and resistance against corporate control, it includes a complete suite of free software tools for creating and sharing media without spending a cent.
  • 2026-07-07
    electro·pizza
    Ryan Oles runs electro.pizza, a personal tech blog covering self-hosting projects, software-defined radio experiments, and single-board computer builds like the Odroid XU4 and Pocket CHIP. The writing section features hands-on hardware and Linux tinkering write-ups, while a reading log tracks an impressively deep backlog of over 125 books.
  • 2026-07-07
    eris meow :3
    Eris's personal homepage blends cat-themed personality with genuine technical depth, showcasing her Linux setup (Arch, naturally), sysadmin work, self-hosted services, and a custom CSS editor built right into the page. Visitors will find sona art, tech specs for her desktop and laptop, a fediverse presence, and playful interactive features like a push notification sender and rotating sandwiches.
  • 2026-07-07
    esgeroth
    Pete Rijks (esgeroth) presents his personal homepage styled as a Unix terminal session, complete with a mock login prompt and ls -l directory listing as navigation. The site contains sections on hardware, software, history, and a log, with a distinctly geeky aesthetic that includes membership in the geekring and Fediring webrings.
  • 2026-07-07
    Find
    Bruce Barnett's comprehensive tutorial on the Unix 'find' command covers everything from basic file searching to advanced techniques using xargs, cpio, file permissions, and expressions. Part of the larger Grymoire Unix reference collection, this page is a go-to resource for anyone looking to master one of the most essential Unix/Linux command-line tools.
  • 2026-07-07
    Flarn2006's Blog
    Hacking the Bose Soundtouch, and its Linux-based OS: Flarn2006's tech blog documents hacking the Bose SoundTouch home stereo system to access its hidden embedded Linux shell via telnet, complete with step-by-step instructions. A curious find for hardware hackers and Linux enthusiasts, this post reveals the hidden operating system lurking inside a popular consumer audio device.

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