Weirdnet Links  |  newest  |  search  |  archive  |  rss  |  atom  |  directory

Link Dump

...i found this and dropped it here.

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


  • 2026-07-07
    Edward Loveall
    Edward Loveall's personal site showcases a collection of software projects including Scribe, DNS Book, Rouge, and various smaller tools like Color Clock and Processing Sketches. The site also links to his blog, music, and fediverse presence, making it a well-rounded hub for a developer with creative interests.
  • 2026-07-07
    Eiko's space
    Eiko's personal corner of the web belongs to a self-described tech lover, game developer, and Linux enthusiast who digs into low-level and systems programming. The site features blogs, a diary, notes, and a collection of pages reflecting interests in Japanese culture, classic films, and the Unix philosophy.
  • 2026-07-07
    Eli Bendersky's website
    Eli Bendersky's personal technical website covers deep dives into mathematics, compilers, programming, and computer science topics with carefully written long-form posts. Spanning over two decades of content, the site features rigorous explorations of topics like polynomial interpolation, WebAssembly, linear algebra, and compiler construction.
  • 2026-07-07
    Elmar Klausmeier's Blog on Computers, Programming, and Mathematics (Page 1)
    Elmar Klausmeier's technical blog dives deep into numerical mathematics, particularly the analysis of stiff ordinary differential equations, stability regions, and predictor-corrector methods based on Tendler formulas. Posts feature interactive 3D stability mountain visualizations, high-precision computations, and comparisons of BDF, Tendler, and Tischer numerical methods.
  • 2026-07-07
    Eloquent JavaScript
    Eloquent JavaScript is the free online home of Marijn Haverbeke's acclaimed programming book, now in its 4th edition (2024), covering JavaScript from the fundamentals through advanced topics like asynchronous programming, Node.js, and browser APIs. Readers get access to the full text online, a code sandbox for exercises, and downloadable versions in PDF, EPUB, and MOBI formats.
  • 2026-07-07
    emile.space
    Emile's personal corner of the internet hosts a sprawling self-hosted infrastructure including a Git server, photo publishing, social media instance, CTF platform, Nix cache, and streaming setup. The site serves as a hub for a technically ambitious individual who builds and runs their own open-source web services, with sections for projects, publications, talks, workshops, and CTF challenges.
  • 2026-07-07
    End to End – the PHP fanlisting
    End to End is the official TFL-approved fanlisting for the PHP programming language, created by Angela Sabas and boasting 883 members from 60 countries. It serves as a gathering place for PHP enthusiasts worldwide, offering membership listing, fan codes, and affiliate links to related programming fanlistings.
  • 2026-07-07
    Eng:XML Schema Fictionbook 2.1 — FictionBook
    FictionBook.org hosts the official XML schema documentation for the FictionBook 2.1 e-book format, a structured XML standard used to validate and author digital books. The page presents the full XSD schema source code along with technical details about namespace imports, making it an essential reference for developers building FictionBook-compatible tools.
  • 2026-07-07
    Erika Rowland
    Erika Rowland is an ops-focused software engineer who shares notes and articles on topics like resilience engineering, Elixir, and Gleam. The site features a lightweight personal hub with links to her writing, quick references, and social profiles across the fediverse and Bluesky.
  • 2026-07-07
    esoteric.codes
    Esoteric.codes is a deep-dive publication dedicated to esoteric programming languages, weird computational systems, and the artists and tinkerers who create them. Featuring interviews with esolangers, code poets, and livecoding pioneers, it covers everything from minimalist languages to constraint-based systems that deliberately challenge the conventions of computing.
  • 2026-07-07
    Essem
    Essem's personal homepage showcases a developer who builds open-source projects including esmBot and runs Fediverse instances like wetdry.world and lethallava.land. The site serves as a hub linking to their code projects, microblogging presence on both Fediverse and Bluesky, and a Ko-fi support page.
  • 2026-07-07
    etamodder boring site
    Etamodder's self-described 'boring site' is actually a quirky personal hub packed with small web tools and projects, including a DungeonMapper game, a Pac-Man clone, a file uploader, and a VNC connector. The stamp collection advocating for Linux, IPv6, HTML5, and internet privacy reveals a developer passionate about open-web principles and retro computing culture.
  • 2026-07-07
    eva's site
    Eva's personal site showcases her work as a developer and hobbyist pentester with a focus on infosec, devops, and open-source software projects. Visitors can explore her public GitHub projects including a Minecraft server scanner, a RuneScape mod loader, and a Discord client modification called Moonlight.
  • 2026-07-07
    Evan Boehs
    Evan Boehs is a developer and tinkerer interested in empowering individuals through technology, with a personal site linking to his blog, GitHub, and social media presence. The minimal but carefully crafted homepage hints at a thoughtful technologist who splits time between coding projects and skiing.
  • 2026-07-07
    Everything I Wrote – journal.stuffwithstuff.com
    Bob Nystrom's technical blog covers programming languages, game development, and software design, spanning nearly two decades of posts from a developer best known for writing 'Game Programming Patterns' and 'Crafting Interpreters'. The archive is rich with deep dives into language design, roguelike algorithms, and specific languages like Dart, Go, and Lua, making it a treasure trove for language nerds and game developers alike.
  • 2026-07-07
    exozyme
    Exozyme is a cozy online computing community where members collaborate on open-source projects, contribute to tools like KDE, NixOS, and ForgeFed, and chat via Matrix, XMPP, and IRC. The group is known for wild hacking experiments such as booting Linux off Google Drive and hosting exocon, an annual virtual conference for the community.
  • 2026-07-07
    ezhik.jp
    Ezhik is a Tokyo-based developer who writes about programming, productivity tools, and personal tech experiments, with posts covering Lua scripting, Obsidian note-taking, Hammerspoon automation, and EPUB fixes. The site blends technical how-tos with personal reflections, making it a great find for developers interested in macOS automation and indie software tinkering.
  • 2026-07-07
    ezri
    Ezri is a 21-year-old computer science student from NYC who runs a personal internet hosting service with its own ASN and works in DevOps and HPC clusters. The site showcases an active project list spanning embedded systems, air quality sensing, BLE, and network infrastructure, offering a fascinating glimpse into a technically ambitious young engineer's world.
  • 2026-07-07
    Fabian's public notepad
    Fabian Holzer's personal notepad is a software engineer's blog covering software engineering, web development, and the broader world of blogging and the indie web. Updated regularly with short notes and longer articles, it reflects a curious mind that ranges beyond tech into whatever ideas catch his attention.
  • 2026-07-07
    Felix Elsner · ix5.org
    Felix Elsner's personal hub showcasing a mix of technology projects, including Android Open Devices documentation for Sony Xperia phones and AOSP contributions, alongside a curated blogroll of indie web thinkers and writers. The site also features cooking, film recommendations, and a password-protected tango video collection, making it a well-rounded showcase of a technically-minded hobbyist's many interests.
  • 2026-07-07
    felix waller
    Felix Waller is a computer science student at the University of Manchester who showcases his web development projects, including a positivity journalling app, a Eurovision companion tool, and a stream-of-consciousness writing tool. The site also features a blog with posts on web development topics, blending his programming and musical interests into a clean personal portfolio.
  • 2026-07-07
    ficd.sh
    Daniel's personal corner of the web, where a self-described software developer keeps a blog, links to a Git repository, and maintains a minimal but thoughtfully crafted site built with a custom static site generator called Zona. The site participates in several webrings including shring, noai, and *nix, signaling a clear affinity for open-source and indie web culture.
  • 2026-07-07
    FIGBERT
    Benji is an Israeli-American industrial designer and programmer who shares long-form blog posts, link commentary, and personal projects spanning software, hardware, and consumer product design. The site blends technical writing, reading and film logs, and a portfolio of projects like a projectile launcher and cloud tools, offering a window into the work of a Stanford design and CS student.
  • 2026-07-07
    Filip Hráček’s homepage
    Filip Hráček is a Prague-based developer and journalist whose homepage showcases an impressive range of programming projects, from iOS games and text game frameworks to Markov chain experiments and neural network demos. Visitors will find a dense portfolio of creative software experiments, tools, and talks spanning game development, AI, web utilities, and even DJ notation proposals.
  • 2026-07-07
    Find duplicate files.
    A PerlMonks community post by user 'salvadors' sharing a Perl script for finding duplicate files on disk, written as a faster and cleaner alternative to existing scripts found online. The post includes discussion, code samples, and community replies, making it a practical reference for Perl programmers dealing with filesystem deduplication.
  • 2026-07-07
    flamendless
    Brandon Blanker Lim-it, an indie game developer and programmer, shares years of technical blog posts covering Lua, Go, Python, NoSQL, Linux, and game development tutorials. The archive spans from 2018 to 2026 and includes hands-on dev logs, coding style guides, OOP game tutorials, and honest rants about tech choices.
  • 2026-07-07
    Flash Laboratory Archive
    André Michelle's Flash Laboratory Archive preserves a collection of Flash-based interactive experiments and creative works from the classic web era. Visitors can browse through the archived pieces using a simple gallery interface, getting a glimpse into the experimental Flash artistry that defined early web creativity.
  • 2026-07-07
    flower.codes
    Zach's personal site at flower.codes blends a developer's blog with a curated library of books and a links collection, offering posts on coding topics like CodeReader and Eval++ alongside more reflective pieces. The "rules" page and eclectic mix of projects make this a thoughtful, minimalist corner of the web from someone clearly passionate about both building things and reading.
  • 2026-07-07
    FLOZzʼ Blog
    FLOZz's Blog, run by Fabien LOISON, covers a wide range of technical topics including Python tooling, Linux, WebAssembly, GameBoy development, self-hosted cloud music, and open-source projects like Rivalcfg for configuring SteelSeries gaming mice. Written in French, the blog blends deep technical dives with approachable explainers, making it a rich resource for developers and Linux enthusiasts alike.
  • 2026-07-07
    flwrstems
    Ashley's personal homepage showcases her work as a web developer, DevOps engineer, and open-source contributor, with links to projects in hacking, visuals, and sounds. She volunteers with fedihosting.foundation and documents personal infrastructure experiments like setting up a WireGuard VPN, making this a genuine peek into a developer's technical life.

« newer | older »


Have a link suggestion? Send it to pablomurad@pm.me.