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Link Dump

...i found this and dropped it here.

today: 0 | this month: 11894 | latest: 2026-07-12 | total: 17088


  • 2026-07-07
    We are Team Internet – Webrocker
    Webrocker's personal blog includes this post rallying support for net neutrality during the 2017 Battle for the Net campaign, urging readers to oppose FCC rollbacks of open internet rules. The site mixes German and English content across writing, drawing, photography, and links, with this entry serving as a call to action against ISP overreach.
  • 2026-07-07
    WHA!
    Yoyo's personal Neocities homepage blends self-expression with a strong pro-Palestinian political voice, featuring a blog, manifesto, book recommendations, and a quirky curse word collection. The site has a distinctly old-web handcrafted feel with webrings, guestbook, and collectible buttons alongside its heartfelt personal content.
  • 2026-07-07
    Who Rules America? Power, Politics, & Social Change
    Built around sociologist G. William Domhoff's decades of research, this site examines who holds power in America through analyses of the corporate elite, wealth inequality, and political influence. Featuring full-text book chapters, a Power Elite Database, lecture videos, and regularly updated articles, it serves as a comprehensive academic resource on power structure research.
  • 2026-07-07
    zanshin.net
    Mark H. Nichols runs this long-running personal site where programming reflections, technology commentary, and musings on tools like LLMs and Hugo sit alongside links to music compositions and reading notes. Posts lean technical, with a thoughtful voice covering software development, calendar sync headaches, and the nature of AI, making it a compelling read for developers with broad interests.
  • 2026-07-07
    alyxia.dev
    Alyxia is a full stack developer's personal homepage featuring a blog, a friends page, and links to their GitHub and Last.fm profiles. The site has a cozy, community-oriented feel with a webring and a collection of friend badges hinting at a rich social web presence.
  • 2026-07-07
    cpli.dev
    The personal site of cpli, a technically minded individual whose sparse but intriguing pages explore hypertext theory, home directory conventions, and links to esoteric programming and math resources like nlab, 1lab, and unison. The site has a distinctly academic-hacker flavor, touching on category theory, formal methods, and the philosophy of markup languages.
  • 2026-07-07
    gimcrackd.com
    A minimal page at gimcrackd.com hosting source code or programming resources, with almost no visible content beyond a single image. The sparse structure suggests a code snippet or developer resource page that has lost most of its content or relies on external references.
  • 2026-07-07
    eric-xia.com
    Eric Xia is a Brown University researcher and creative working at the intersection of math, computer science, and linguistics, with a focus on LLM interpretability and task adaptation. The site showcases his projects including word.golf (a word-meaning-based game), essays on linguistics, art, and technical papers on topics ranging from GANs to IPA pictography.
  • 2026-07-07
    plastic-idolatry.com
    The personal hub of Eiríkr Åsheim, a programmer and philosopher whose site links to original code projects including kind-projector, machinist, and spire alongside music, games, and writing. A compact but richly connected landing page revealing someone deeply embedded in open-source Scala development, tabletop games, and anarcho-syndicalist thought.
  • 2026-07-07
    mayaks.eu
    Maya Karabula-Stysiak's personal site showcases her programming projects including a JavaScript window manager, a 3D engine, and a Gemini-to-HTTP proxy, alongside a tiny-log of technical and philosophical musings. The site embraces the 'small web' aesthetic, offering a charming mix of coding experiments, drawings, and curated lists of books, music, and films.
  • 2026-07-07
    danluu.com
    Dan Luu's technical blog covers software engineering, systems performance, computer architecture, and the tech industry with a sharp analytical lens. Posts range from deep dives into cache incidents and latency pitfalls to broader essays on hiring, productivity, and organizational culture.
  • 2026-07-07
    silverskylabs.github.io
    Yakhak is a security research paper by Sanford Moskowitz at SilverSky Labs exposing a vulnerability in the Yik Yak anonymous social media iOS app that allowed full account takeover over a shared WiFi network. The site includes a detailed vulnerability analysis, proof-of-concept toolkit download, and step-by-step exploitation walkthrough using tools like Wireshark, sslsplit, and cycript.
  • 2026-07-07
    zesty.ca
    A browser-based JavaScript tool that lets you explore what Facebook publicly exposes about users and their friends through the Facebook Graph API. Built by the creator of zesty.ca, this privacy transparency tool runs entirely client-side, meaning no data passes through any server, making it a clever demonstration of API browsing and a useful privacy awareness resource.
  • 2026-07-07
    ecelis.remotes.club
    Ernesto's personal homepage introduces him as a remote worker with a background in software projects for Mexico's government and private sector. Outside of work, he shares interests in reading, music, hiking, and camping, giving the site a light outdoorsy personal flavor.
  • 2026-07-07
    wiki.c2.com
    This is the legendary Ward Cunningham wiki (c2.com), the original wiki ever created, focused on software development, programming patterns, and computer science concepts. The CamelCase page specifically documents the WikiWord naming convention that became foundational to wiki culture and collaborative web-based knowledge systems.
  • 2026-07-07
    tilde.town
    An interactive Turing machine simulator hosted on tilde.town, featuring a canvas-based visual display and an editable source code interface for running custom state machines. The included example implements Langton's Ant, making it a neat hands-on tool for exploring theoretical computation concepts.
  • 2026-07-07
    tilde.town
    A minimalist tilde.town experiment by troido featuring a simple browser-based chat interface with basic commands like '/nick' to change display names. The page is a bare-bones real-time messaging test, notable for its candid developer note about mysterious CPU usage creep over time.
  • 2026-07-07
    "Can you get cp to give a progress bar like wget?" - Chris Lamb
    Chris Lamb's technical blog features clever shell scripting tips, including this post demonstrating how to add a wget-style progress bar to the cp command using strace and awk. A concise and satisfying hack for Linux power users who want more feedback during file copy operations.
  • 2026-07-07
    #LAK13
    Recipes in capturing and analyzing data – Google Groups Dashboard using Yahoo Pipes (no code) – By @mhawksey: Martin Hawksey's technical blog covers data analytics, Google Sheets automation, and tools like Yahoo Pipes for capturing and processing online data without writing code. This particular post walks through building a Google Groups activity dashboard using RSS feeds and pipe manipulation, making it a useful resource for learning analytics enthusiasts and no-code data wranglers.
  • 2026-07-07
    $cript Fanatic
    How to Retrieve Remote MAC Address: The '$cript Fanatic' blog by Shay Levy focuses on PowerShell scripting tips and techniques, including practical code snippets like retrieving remote MAC addresses via ARP and ping. It's a handy reference for Windows administrators and PowerShell enthusiasts looking for quick, real-world scripting solutions.
  • 2026-07-07
    <(^.^)> tsuki
    Tuan (known online as tsuki) runs this minimalist blog covering programming, pixel art, music, and personal reflections, with notable posts on note-taking workflows and WebTV history. The site doubles as a showcase of handcrafted web aesthetics, featuring a custom classless CSS framework called Subreply CSS that Tuan created and shares openly.
  • 2026-07-07
    superneutron
    Superneutron's cozy Neocities corner highlights their interests in programming, drawing, and anime, with dedicated sections for artwork and coding projects. The site participates in several webrings including NoJS, Hotline, and Yesterweb, making it a small but connected node in the old-web revival community.
  • 2026-07-07
    · roytang.net
    Roy Tang's long-running personal blog covers programming, software development, gaming, and life in Metro Manila, active since the early 2000s. Posts range from weeknotes and game reviews to thoughtful essays on tech industry topics, blogging culture, and the evolving web.
  • 2026-07-07
    (blamedenny.3d.tc / mtndew417.serv00.net) // blamedenny's site
    Blamedenny's personal hub showcases a collection of self-made projects including Vertexia, a sandbox game, and an unofficial Brick Hill reverse engineering wiki. The creator, Denny, documents their work in PHP, HTML, CSS, and GameMaker 8.1 alongside quirky extras like a random NFT generator and legacy web archives.
  • 2026-07-07
    +/
    Run by a developer called matt, this minimal site is built around a love of programming, array languages like APL and K, and Emacs. The name '+/' is itself a nod to APL notation, signaling a technically-minded creator whose content appeals to fellow language and code enthusiasts.
  • 2026-07-07
    ./Martijn.sh > Blog
    Martijn's minimalist personal blog pulls posts directly from the Fediverse via Lemmy, with no cookies, no tracking, and a clean dark/light mode toggle. The site reflects its creator's passions for decentralized web infrastructure, open-source software, cybersecurity, and full-stack development.
  • 2026-07-07
    //⋆☀︎. /
    The personal homepage of a software engineer and indie game developer going by the handle 90-008, this site blends a retro aesthetic with live activity feeds showing recent GitHub commits, game sessions, and music listens. Visitors will find links to their development profiles, an angelsona lore section, a guestbook, and a stream of real-time coding activity across projects like 'fjall'.
  • 2026-07-07
    /dev/lawyer
    Kyle E. Mitchell's /dev/lawyer is a deeply substantive blog exploring the intersection of law, software licensing, and technology, written by a practicing attorney who specializes in open source and tech contracts. With hundreds of dated posts covering topics like open core licensing, plain language legal drafting, AI and legal advice, and software copyright, it is an invaluable resource for developers and lawyers alike.
  • 2026-07-07
    /home
    Manik Sharma's minimalist personal homepage serves as a hub linking to his blog, projects, webrings, and a company he's affiliated with. The sparse, text-only design and links to GitHub and 'things_ive_made' suggest a developer sharing their creative and technical work online.
  • 2026-07-07
    0xFF
    Paul Glushak (hxii) is a Python developer and R&D team lead who shares his personal projects, productivity experiments, and developer rants in a clean minimalist format. The site showcases tools like Hajime (a static site generator), Boku (a task runner), and Dengonban, alongside a journal of reflections on ADHD productivity, work culture, and software craftsmanship.

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