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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
    Stephensworld
    Stephensworld is S.P. Hurlsmith's personal corner of the internet, featuring blog posts, project updates, and tutorials from a self-described hobbyist programmer who works in C and C++. The site also touches on drawing, storytelling, and an original game called Wawacraft, making it a lively snapshot of a creative technologist's ongoing work.
  • 2026-07-07
    Steve's Bear Blog ʕ º ᴥ ºʔ
    Steve Dylan's personal Bear Blog serves as a hub for a DX engineer passionate about building developer tools and advocating for an open, secure, and free web. The site touches on sustainable web practices, writing, and art, with a minimalist aesthetic that embodies its open-web philosophy.
  • 2026-07-07
    strat
    Strat's personal site is a no-frills homepage from a low-level programmer who works primarily in C and Rust, self-hosts Minecraft servers, a Forgejo git instance, and an AWS setup. Alongside technical interests, the site touches on snowboarding, learning German, FOSS advocacy, and anime fandom, with a refreshingly minimal design philosophy that prioritizes content over flashy graphics.
  • 2026-07-07
    STRML
    Projects and Work: STRML is a minimalist portfolio showcasing the projects and work of developer Samuel Reed, with content rendered through a distinctive animated typing effect. The site highlights creative technical projects that blend programming with interactive web experiences.
  • 2026-07-07
    Susam Pal
    Susam Pal's long-running technical blog covers programming, mathematics, and computing curiosities spanning over two decades of posts. Topics range from Emacs tricks and shell scripting to abstract algebra, CSS puzzles, and low-level DOS programming, making it a rich archive for curious technologists.
  • 2026-07-07
    Sympolymathesy, by Chris Krycho
    Chris Krycho's personal site 'Sympolymathesy' is a rich collection of essays, notes, and talks spanning software engineering, theology, ethics, and the philosophy of technology. A software engineer and composer by trade, Krycho publishes deeply considered pieces on topics like version control systems, open source infrastructure, AI ethics, and the intersection of faith and technology.
  • 2026-07-07
    Szymon Kaliski
    Szymon Kaliski is an independent consultant and researcher specializing in computational interfaces, LLMs, and programmable ink, sharing quarterly newsletter updates on his technical explorations and personal projects. The site blends software development work, ambient music, independent research, and personal habit tracking into a thoughtfully documented personal presence.
  • 2026-07-07
    T-SQl Cursor Example
    A concise technical reference page by Jack Donnell covering T-SQL cursor syntax with a practical example for database developers. The page focuses specifically on how to declare and use cursors in Transact-SQL, making it a quick reference for SQL Server programmers.
  • 2026-07-07
    tabby puddle
    Tabby's personal corner of the web blends quirky JavaScript experiments with a genuine passion for toki pona, the constructed minimalist language that inspired the site's creation. Visitors can play with a unit converter, Fibonacci sequence generator, a simple clicker, and an octal timekeeping clock, alongside a personal image gallery and update log.
  • 2026-07-07
    Tales from a solo dev | Tommy Palmer
    Tommy Palmer, a London-based web developer, shares hard-won lessons from his time as the sole developer at CastRooms, a DJ video streaming startup. The post covers practical advice on shipping code fast, trusting your instincts, and surviving the isolation of solo development on complex browser-based audio and video projects.
  • 2026-07-07
    Tanner's Site
    Tanner is a firmware and hardware engineer from Calgary who shares his software projects, DIY creations, and technical writing on this personal site. Highlights include open-source tools like a browser notification service, a command-line pastebin, and a makerspace member portal, alongside physical builds like an LED dress, a custom air quality monitor, and a garage door opener hack.
  • 2026-07-07
    Teletexto #012 - Adrianistán
    Adrianistán is the personal tech blog of Adrián Arroyo Calle, featuring a recurring 'Teletexto' link roundup series that curates interesting programming and technology articles. Each edition dives into topics like APL, Clojure, Prolog, game development, concurrency patterns, and digital policy, making it a rich resource for curious developers.
  • 2026-07-07
    The Advantages Of Flexible Typing
    An official SQLite documentation page that makes a detailed case for the database engine's flexible typing system, explaining why storing any value in any column is a feature rather than a flaw. It covers practical use cases like attribute tables, dirty data storage, and dynamic languages, while systematically rebutting common objections to flexible typing.
  • 2026-07-07
    The Blog of Random
    Zerolimits.dev hosts a wide-ranging personal blog covering topics from cybersecurity and threat modelling to mathematics, chaos theory, and quantum physics. Posts span several years and mix technical deep-dives like 'How to Make an OS' and 'Finding Vulnerabilities in Secton' with lighter curiosities such as the history of toilet paper.
  • 2026-07-07
    The Curse and Blessings of Dynamic SQL
    Erland Sommarskog, a SQL Server MVP, presents an exhaustive technical guide to dynamic SQL covering best practices, performance considerations, SQL injection risks, and real-world use cases for both developers and DBAs. With 166 code examples and dozens of detailed sections, this article is a landmark reference for anyone working with SQL Server who wants to understand when and how to use dynamic SQL safely and effectively.
  • 2026-07-07
    the greg technology blog
    Greg's technology blog covers a wide range of developer topics including cloud hosting platforms, GitHub Actions tricks, Flask deployments, and SQL internals, written in a casual and opinionated voice. Posts range from hands-on technical tutorials to sharp commentary on the indie web and platform decay, making it a fun read for developers who care about the open internet.
  • 2026-07-07
    The Grug Brained Developer
    Written in the voice of a caveman programmer named Grug, this humorous yet genuinely insightful guide tackles software development philosophy with sections on complexity, testing, microservices, type systems, and other real engineering concerns. The deliberately simple writing style makes it both entertaining and surprisingly practical for developers of all experience levels.
  • 2026-07-07
    The Rat Shack
    The Rat Shack is a sprawling personal site by a programmer and creature-sim enthusiast covering game dev experiments in Godot, 3D art in Blender, pixel art, and deep dives into virtual pet games like Petz and Creatures. Packed with years of dated posts, tutorials, reviews, and creative experiments, it rewards curious visitors with everything from Kotlin programming notes to Raveen Kat retrospectives and homemade spline creatures.
  • 2026-07-07
    The Universe of Discourse
    Mark Dominus (MJD) has been writing 'The Universe of Discourse' since 2005, covering mathematics, programming, language, etymology, and Haskell with a distinctly intellectual and curious voice. With hundreds of posts across subtopics and nearly two decades of archives, this is a deeply personal and wide-ranging technical blog that rewards explorers with everything from git utilities to quincunx symmetry.
  • 2026-07-07
    The Unofficial Ruby Usage Guide
    Originally written by Ian Macdonald for internal use at Google, this guide covers Ruby coding style and best practices for system administration scripting. It offers detailed guidelines on code organization, exceptions, indentation, debugging, benchmarking, and unit testing, making it a practical reference for Ruby programmers seeking a consistent stylistic vocabulary.
  • 2026-07-07
    thefreecountry.com
    Free Programmers' Resources, Free Webmasters' Resources, Free Security Resources: thefreecountry.com is a massive curated directory of free resources for programmers, webmasters, and security enthusiasts, covering everything from compilers and source code libraries to PHP scripts, web hosting, and security tools. Created by Christopher Heng, the site has been carefully maintained over many years and serves as a go-to reference for developers seeking free and open-source software, utilities, and tutorials.
  • 2026-07-07
    TheLastGimbus
    TheLastGimbus is a developer's personal hub showcasing a variety of open-source projects, including FreeBuddy (a headphone companion app), Roll-API, and MIDI-to-Sprig. The site links out to a GitHub profile packed with interesting software experiments and serves as a lightweight landing page for a prolific coder.
  • 2026-07-07
    theo court
    Theo Court's personal website showcases his passion for tinkering with computers and working on various software projects in his free time. The site links out to his presence on the Fediverse, GitHub, and Bluesky, hinting at an open-source and indie web-oriented personality.
  • 2026-07-07
    thesephist.com
    Linus (thesephist) is a software researcher and engineer whose site collects over a decade of writing on AI interfaces, knowledge tools, and creative software, alongside more than 100 open side projects ranging from compilers to personal productivity tools. A fascinating portal into the mind of someone deeply invested in how language models can augment human thinking and expression.
  • 2026-07-07
    This is one of Alan's web pages
    Alan's omg.lol homepage is a data science professional's personal hub linking out to his data blog, a Peloton Shiny app called RideShare, a Last.fm stats tool called TuneR, and his Destiny gaming content. Equal parts data nerd and hobbyist, the page offers a quick snapshot of Alan's many online presences.
  • 2026-07-07
    Thou Art Programmer
    A hobbyist programmer's tutorial-style article explaining isometric projection in video games, covering how perspective elimination works and how to implement an isometric tile renderer. Part of a larger personal site with sections on GP32 development, NES graphics, and sprite poses, this page digs into the math and code behind classic isometric game engines.
  • 2026-07-07
    tiago's website
    Tiago is a student from Portugal who has built an impressive collection of self-made web tools, including a homemade search engine, a reverse-engineered Twitter API client, a proof-of-work CAPTCHA alternative, and a link analytics tracker. The site serves as a portfolio-style hub showcasing original open-source projects that tackle privacy, data analysis, and web infrastructure.
  • 2026-07-07
    Tilde Club Link Vis
    A creative data visualization project by a Tilde Club member that renders an interactive network graph of links between users on the tilde.club shared Unix server. Built with D3.js and Perl scraping tools, the graph lets visitors zoom, drag nodes, and mouseover to explore the web of connections among the early Tilde Club community.
  • 2026-07-07
    Tim Bachmann
    Tim Bachmann is a Swiss software engineer who shares his personal projects, blog posts, and tools built with technologies like Rust, JavaScript, Kotlin, and Ansible. Visitors will find a mix of open-source apps, self-hosting guides, and dev tutorials reflecting Tim's work across web, Android, and CLI development.
  • 2026-07-07
    Today I Learned
    Run by ve3zsh on tilde.club, this 'Today I Learned' blog features thoughtful, opinionated commentary on programming, software complexity, operating systems, security, and tech culture. Each entry digs deep into topics like Linux adoption, software bloat, embedded systems, and privacy, making it a rewarding read for anyone who thinks seriously about how technology actually works.

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