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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
    Peter Stuifzand publog
    Peter Stuifzand's publog documents his hands-on development of Ekster, an IndieWeb Microsub reader and feed aggregator. Posts cover technical implementation details like Micropub, microformats, RSS/JSON feed parsing, and Postgres backend rewrites, making it a niche but valuable resource for IndieWeb developers.
  • 2026-07-07
    Pfych
    Pfych is the personal site of a Sydney-based software developer and self-described hobbyist, covering programming, games, music, photography, and demos. The site is self-hosted and custom-generated, featuring an index of posts, contact details across a wide range of platforms, and a charming collection of old-web badges.
  • 2026-07-07
    PHP Scripts
    Robotess.net, maintained by Ekaterina, offers a collection of PHP 7 scripts including forked versions of popular fanlisting tools like Enthusiast, Listing Admin, and Ninja Links. The site serves as a hub for downloading and troubleshooting these community-focused web scripts, with updates posted as new versions are released.
  • 2026-07-07
    Picorims
    Picorims is the personal site of a French computer science student and apprentice at Polytech Paris-Saclay, showcasing their work in software development, music creation, and Minecraft projects. A concise hub linking to the creator's various technical and creative pursuits, it gives a neat overview of a developer who codes and composes.
  • 2026-07-07
    Piet van Zoen
    Piet van Zoen is a software developer based in Portland, Oregon who shares notes on programming topics like TDD, Git organization, Copilot setup, and his IndieWeb tech stack. The site blends technical writing with personal interests including sci-fi book recommendations, field recording, and Raspberry Pi tinkering.
  • 2026-07-07
    Planet Python
    Planet Python is a long-running blog aggregator that collects and republishes the latest posts from dozens of Python developers, educators, and open-source projects from across the web. Visitors get a single feed of tutorials, tips, library announcements, and community news from well-known sources like Real Python, Python Software Foundation, and many individual contributors.
  • 2026-07-07
    PLEAC - Programming Language Examples Alike Cookbook
    PLEAC (Programming Language Examples Alike Cookbook) is a collaborative reference project that reimplements the classic Perl Cookbook's solutions across multiple programming languages including Python, Ruby, OCaml, Groovy, and Guile. It serves as a side-by-side comparison tool for developers wanting to see how common programming problems are solved in different languages, making it invaluable for polyglot programmers and language learners.
  • 2026-07-07
    Posting Twitter Updates via Curl | Terminally Incoherent
    Luke Maciak's tech blog 'Terminally Incoherent' covers programming tips, command-line tricks, and Linux utilities, with this particular post demonstrating how to post Twitter updates using a simple curl command. The site features a rich reference section including Git, LaTeX, MySQL, and Vim cheat sheets, making it a handy resource for developers and sysadmins.
  • 2026-07-07
    Posts Archive - Emmett's Blog
    Emmett Naughton's personal blog covers a wide mix of developer life, indie music booking, and reflections on creativity and technology. Posts range from web development topics like Shopify Flow and coding journeys to thoughts on running a band, playing shows, and the intersection of art and business.
  • 2026-07-07
    Princess Grace's Lair
    Princess Grace is a self-described 'lesbian supervillain' who has built an impressive collection of quirky software tools, tabletop RPGs, podcasts, and fiction all under one roof. Highlights include a command-line Mastodon client, an esoteric programming language, a Shadow the Hedgehog tabletop RPG, and several actual-play and rewatch podcasts covering fandoms from Discworld to Ace Attorney.
  • 2026-07-07
    Programming from the human perspective By Ibrahim Diallo
    Ibrahim Diallo writes about programming from a distinctly human perspective, blending technical tutorials, developer culture observations, and reflections on technology's impact on everyday life. Posts range from practical tips like PHP search algorithms and Windows command-line tricks to thought-provoking essays on AI, privacy paranoia, and workplace dynamics.
  • 2026-07-07
    Programming with standards
    Scriptol.com is a comprehensive development resource covering JavaScript, PHP, C++, HTML5, CSS, and the custom Scriptol programming language for building web and mobile applications. Visitors will find tutorials, open-source tools like the Advanced Explorer file manager and Composite static site generator, plus an encyclopedia of development languages, frameworks, and IDEs.
  • 2026-07-07
    Programming, Motherfucker - Do you speak it?
    A tongue-in-cheek manifesto site by Zed A. Shaw and the 'Programming Motherfuckers,' railing against bloated software development methodologies like Scrum, Kanban, and XP in favor of just writing code. The site features a sardonic values table skewering Agile buzzwords and links to a 'Become a Programmer' guide and branded merchandise.
  • 2026-07-07
    Proycon's Homepage
    Maarten van Gompel (proycon) is a research software engineer based in Eindhoven who shares his work in Natural Language Processing, open-source software, and Unix systems alongside personal interests like language learning and home automation. The site features blog posts, a software portfolio, scientific publications, and language-learning resources, making it a rich hub for anyone interested in the intersection of linguistics and technology.
  • 2026-07-07
    pufikas
    Pufikas is the personal homepage of a Lithuanian developer who loves JavaScript, VSCodium, and open-source tools, showcasing highlighted projects like a Pokédex built with VueJS, a self-driving car neural network visualizer, and a GitHub deployment script. The site features a charming old-web aesthetic with customizable themes, scanlines, cursor effects, and a Last.fm widget, making it a delightful peek into a hobbyist coder's world.
  • 2026-07-07
    Purdue Hackers Webring
    A webring connecting members and alumni of the Purdue Hackers club, a student hacking and maker community at Purdue University. Notably, the ring software itself was written in Rust, reflecting the technical spirit of its members.
  • 2026-07-07
    PxLoader | A Simple JavasScript Preloader
    PxLoader is an open-source JavaScript library developed by Pixel Lab for preloading images, sounds, and other resources in HTML5 apps and games, originally built for the HTML5 version of Cut the Rope. The site provides step-by-step documentation, code samples, plugin support, and extensibility guides for developers building resource-heavy web experiences.
  • 2026-07-07
    pyrotelekinetic
    Clover Ison, known online as pyrotelekinetic, maintains this minimal personal site built with their own static site generator called yip, emphasizing a script-free, homegrown approach. The site promises future content centered on code and writings about code, with a charming recurring motif about bees.
  • 2026-07-07
    Python Universe Builder
    Python Universe Builder is a SourceForge-hosted project offering a Python-based framework for building text-based universe or world simulation games. It appears to be an open-source development tool aimed at programmers interested in building interactive or simulation environments with Python.
  • 2026-07-07
    PythonBooks
    Hosted on the official Python wiki, this page serves as a comprehensive directory of books covering the Python programming language, organized by skill level, topic, and language. From introductory guides to advanced references and specialized topics like game programming, web programming, and scientific computing, it offers a well-structured starting point for Python learners and practitioners worldwide.
  • 2026-07-07
    q.pfiffer.org - Home
    Quinlan Pfiffer's personal site blends programming projects, outdoor adventures, and eclectic writing under the banner 'Malevolent Cartography.' Notable projects include OlegDB, a transactional datastore, a C micro web-framework called 38-Moths, and a Google SparseHash reimplementation, alongside blog posts about packrafting, skiing, and car living.
  • 2026-07-07
    Qubyte Codes - About
    The personal site and blog of Dr. Aura Niamh Everitt, a Brighton-based software developer and former quantum information scientist who writes about JavaScript, Node.js, Ruby, Scala, and the ethics of software development. The site embraces IndieWeb principles, supports webmentions, and reflects a thoughtful engineering philosophy documented in its colophon.
  • 2026-07-07
    Quinn’s Home Page | Quinn Pollock’s Site
    Quinn Pollock is a programmer who shares personal projects including a queer tech podcast, a D&D actual play podcast, and a film tracker for movies directed by women. The site blends tech work with personal reflections, book thoughts, and live feeds of what Quinn is currently watching, listening to, and reading.
  • 2026-07-07
    Quintopia's Stuff
    David Rutter, known online as Quintopia, shares a wide-ranging collection of personal projects including software, esolangs, magic tricks, and long-distance hiking blogs. The site serves as a portal to years of creative work spanning programming experiments, writing, and outdoor adventures, with a to-do list hinting at many ambitious projects in progress.
  • 2026-07-07
    Rafael Escobar
    Rafael Escobar is a Brazilian programmer's personal homepage covering his interests in computing science, linguistics, free software, and libertarianism. The site links out to git projects, a Gemini capsule version, and a variety of platforms including last.fm, MyAnimeList, and Neopets, painting a picture of a technically minded, eclectic individual.
  • 2026-07-07
    Rain's slonksite
    Rain (also known as slonkazoid) is a 19-year-old Turkish developer who specializes in Rust, Bash, and a wide range of languages and frameworks, with a particular love for the Rust/Axum/Tokio web stack. The site serves as a personal hub showcasing projects, commission availability, web philosophy opinions, and a curated network of friend sites.
  • 2026-07-07
    Ralf Brown's Interrupt List - HTML Version
    An HTML conversion of Ralf Brown's legendary Interrupt List, one of the most comprehensive references for DOS interrupt calls ever assembled, featuring over 9000 linked pages and 350 searchable indexes. Created by Marc Perkel of Computer Tyme, this invaluable resource documents every known documented and undocumented DOS interrupt call, making it an essential bookmark for low-level and assembly language programmers.
  • 2026-07-07
    Randall Degges - Randall Degges
    Randall Degges, a self-described 'happy programmer,' shares his thoughts on software development, web security, APIs, authentication, and the occasional personal finance or lifestyle post. The archive spans over a decade of technical writing, covering topics from GraphQL and Django to local storage pitfalls and cryptocurrency mining.
  • 2026-07-07
    Ray Tracer Construction Kit
    Written by developer matklad, this in-depth tutorial post makes the case for building a toy ray tracer as one of the best exercises for learning a new programming language, covering modules, polymorphism, parallelism, and performance optimization. The post walks through a structured construction kit from basic image output to 3D scenes, Phong shading, scene description languages, mesh support, and performance tuning with BVH trees.
  • 2026-07-07
    Re
    Re: Bluesky and Decentralization -- Dustycloud Brainstorms: Christine Lemmer-Webber's technical blog dives deep into decentralization, federation protocols, and the architecture of social web platforms like Bluesky and the fediverse. This post is part of an ongoing series critically analyzing Bluesky's decentralization claims while advocating for ActivityPub and the Spritely project as paths toward a genuinely open internet.

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