2026-07-07 Google BBS Terminal Google BBS Terminal is a creative art project by N. Landsteiner of mass:werk that reimagines Google Search as if it were a 1980s bulletin board system, complete with green and amber monochrome display modes and CRT scan line effects. Built with JavaScript, HTML5, and a custom terminal library, it's a fully functional novelty tool that lets you search the web through an authentic-feeling retro terminal interface.
2026-07-07 GopherSpace Schroeder's GopherSpace on SDF is a charming phlog (Gopher blog) dedicated to obsolete and retro technology, with entries covering devices like the Sony PSP, Palm Tungsten, Sega Saturn, MiniDisc, Bandai Wonderswan, and OpenBSD adventures. With dozens of phlog entries spanning years of old computer challenges and niche hardware exploration, it's a treasure trove for anyone nostalgic about forgotten tech.
2026-07-07 Grizz's World Grizz's World is a charmingly retro personal homepage from Iowa packed with ASCII art, computer logs, recipes, and musings from a self-described computer nut who references Alf, Growing Pains, and an uncertain enthusiasm for Star Trek: The Next Generation. The site features original BASIC software available via FTP, a guestbook, webrings, and a scattershot mix of old-web personality that makes it a genuine time capsule.
2026-07-07 Ground Control - Home Ground Control is a personal site dedicated to BBS (Bulletin Board System) culture, featuring guides on how to access BBSLink and DoorParty door game score tracking. The site has an old-web aesthetic with hand-coded pages and participates in multiple retro-themed webrings including the Hotline webring, retronaut webring, and geekring.
2026-07-07 GUIdebook Graphical User Interface gallery: GUIdebook is an extensive archive created by Marcin Wichary dedicated to preserving and showcasing the history of graphical user interfaces across dozens of operating systems, from Windows and Mac OS to BeOS, NeXTSTEP, and Amiga OS. Visitors can explore screenshots, icons, splash screens, sound files, timelines, advertisements, and articles tracing the evolution of GUI design from the earliest experiments to the early 2000s.
2026-07-07 HELLO SAILOR! George's colorful personal site celebrates retro web aesthetics and old internet culture, with pixel art, mini-banners, and 32x32 icons at its heart. The site is actively under construction with plans for shrines, an affiliates page, and hidden easter eggs that make it a charming corner of the modern Neocities scene.
2026-07-07 hey The personal homepage of pivotman319, a self-described fox wolf person who admins BetaWiki and dedicates their time to preserving and documenting ancient Microsoft software builds. The page is a minimal landing hub linking out to their federated social presence and blog, centered around their passion for pre-release and historical Windows software.
2026-07-07 Hey! It's R.K. Smith! Ripley (R.K. Smith) runs this colorful personal site organized around a retro computing aesthetic, with a VCFMW (Vintage Computer Festival Midwest) trip report front and center alongside sections for games, music, and miscellaneous hobbies. The BIOS-style boot screen, DOS directory commands, and Pentium III CPU readout give it an unmistakably old-school computing identity that makes it a fun destination for vintage tech enthusiasts.
2026-07-07 High-tech mid-life crisis. Who is Hohokam? Hohokam's personal site is a self-described 'high-tech mid-life crisis' packed with hands-on projects spanning retro 8-bit computers, hacked consoles, 3D printing, home lab networking, and Raspberry Pi tinkering. Alongside the tech projects, the site features record collecting, hi-fi audio upgrades, and a curated collection of Portland street art, making it a genuinely eclectic Web 1.0-style corner of the internet.
2026-07-07 HoleNet Cobalt 5.0 Techokami's HoleNet is a quirky personal site styled as a retro desktop interface, complete with a working Atari emulator (Javatari), solitaire, a notepad, and various ROM hacking tools for classic Sonic games. The downloads section showcases original PHP-based ROM rippers for a wide range of Sonic titles, making it a genuine resource for retro game hackers and enthusiasts.
2026-07-07 Home Random's personal corner of the web champions older software, legacy devices, and a deliberate rejection of modern AI-infused tech, built using Microsoft Expression Web 4 as a nod to classic web tools. The site features projects, a devices section, a guestbook, and webring participation, making it a cozy hub for like-minded fans of vintage computing culture.
2026-07-07 home MeowZone is a quirky personal homepage built with FrontPage 98/2000, lovingly styled in the old-web tradition by a creator known as flpydisk.sys. The site celebrates retro web authoring tools and browser culture, complete with browser compatibility notes and a SweepRing webring badge.
2026-07-07 Home - Fuego's Cave Fuego's Cave is the personal site of MadCreeper, creator of BonziBUDDY Rewritten and PeedyBUDDY, two projects that revive the classic Microsoft Agent animated desktop companions. The site reflects a deep enthusiasm for old Windows operating systems and Microsoft Agent technology, with links to projects, a webring, and community ties to TMAFE and agentpedia.
2026-07-07 Home - Gridranger Gridranger is the personal blog of Dávid Bárdos, a tech-enthusiast whose posts range from KDE Neon tweaks and degoogling experiments to Win 3.1 nostalgia and custom terminal fonts. The site blends retro computing affection with modern Linux tinkering, sprinkled with gaming backlog updates and personal reflections.
2026-07-07 Home of the Internet Graveyard and more SlimySomething's eclectic personal site features the 'Internet Graveyard,' a section dedicated to dead sites, lost platforms, and digital sellouts, alongside a link dump of old maps, free game soundtracks, and GUI customization relics. With extras like CRT monitor simulation code, a dream journal, and hot takes on internet culture and computers, this site is a loving tribute to the old web aesthetic.
2026-07-07 How It Works | One Terabyte of Kilobyte Age One Terabyte of Kilobyte Age is a research blog by Olia Lialina and Dragan Espenschied digging through the archived Geocities torrent, surfacing and analyzing old-web artifacts like GIFs, MIDI files, and defunct personal pages. This particular post explains the automated process behind their companion Tumblr blog that screenshots and posts rescued Geocities pages, offering a fascinating behind-the-scenes look at digital archaeology.
2026-07-07 Ian's Web Sight! Ian Linkletter's tilde.club personal page greets visitors with a retro-style 'ACTIVATE FRAMES PLEASE!' prompt, evoking the classic era of mid-90s web design and frame-based layouts. Hosted on the collaborative Unix system tilde.club, this site is a charming artifact of old-web culture with minimal but nostalgic content.
2026-07-07 Index of /print Danamania's print archive is a treasure trove of vintage Apple and retro computing ephemera, offering downloadable posters, brochures, stickers, and datasheets spanning classic hardware like the Macintosh 128k, Apple IIe, Quadra 950, and beyond. The collection blends historical authenticity with playful modern recreations, making it a go-to resource for enthusiasts who want to decorate their spaces with period-accurate or lovingly crafted vintage tech memorabilia.
2026-07-07 Index of S546's homepage on remotes.club S546's homepage on remotes.club is a minimalist ASCII-art personal page hosted on a retro-styled community server. The site features a striking text-based banner in the old-web Unix tradition, evoking the aesthetics of bulletin board systems and early terminal culture.
2026-07-07 Is Breaking Into A Timesharing System a Crime? Atari Archives hosts digitized pages from 'The Best of Creative Computing Volume 1' (1976), one of the earliest and most influential computing magazines. This particular page presents a fascinating early discussion of computer security, timesharing system intrusion, and the ethical and legal questions around what we would now call hacking.
2026-07-07 James Friend | PCE.js IBM PC/XT in the Browser James Friend's PCE.js project brings vintage computing history to life by running an emulated 286 IBM PC/XT with Windows 3.0 directly in your browser, no installation required. Built as a port of Hampa Hug's PCE emulator, the project also includes demos of classic Mac Plus environments and iconic games like Wolf3D, Civilization, and Monkey Island.
2026-07-07 jeith! Jeith's Neocities personal site lovingly recreates old-web aesthetics with pixel art collections, photo books, song diaries, art galleries, and fan shrines including a dedicated Mario Party fanpage. The site also features the WiiRing webring and embraces Y2K web culture with webrings, fanlistings, pixel clubs, and a guestbook.
2026-07-07 joshua stein Joshua Stein's personal tech blog is a deep dive into retro computing projects, with a strong focus on vintage Macs, classic system software, and hardware tinkering like fitting an M4 Mac Mini inside an iMac G4. He also develops and releases his own retro software including a classic Mac IRC client and BlueSCSI utilities, making this a genuinely creative corner of the old-school Mac enthusiast world.
2026-07-07 jwz.org Jamie Zawinski, co-founder of Netscape and Mozilla.org and primary developer of Lucid Emacs, maintains this personal hub linking to his blog, DNA Lounge nightclub, hacks, and other projects. A piece of internet history from one of the most influential figures in early open-source and browser development.
2026-07-07 KRY.PT BBS KRY.PT BBS is a retro-style bulletin board system accessible via SSH and Telnet, evoking the classic era of dial-up BBS culture with its ASCII art logo and terminal aesthetics. Visitors can connect directly through command-line protocols, making it a functional throwback to pre-web networked computing.
2026-07-07 LainNet Spaztron64's personal homepage LainNet is a hub for PC-98 retro computing enthusiasts, featuring guides, a Neko Project 2 GDI compatibility table, demoscene productions, and archived websites from defunct sources. The site also includes a 2D and 3DCG art gallery, a blog, a BBS, and various downloads, making it a rich and eclectic corner of the old web.
2026-07-07 maple syrup and pancakes Maple 'Mavica' Syrup's cozy corner of the web, built and maintained on a Windows 98 Compaq Armada running RetroZilla, showcasing a genuine passion for vintage hardware and software. Visitors will find a growing collection of handcrafted Windows-style pixel art icons, personal updates on retro web development, and a warm old-web aesthetic that feels authentically late 90s.
2026-07-07 Maurice's Den Maurice's Den is the charmingly retro homepage of Maurice the Rat and his hare companion Hazel, two fictional time-travelling characters who collect vintage technology and explore old junk across time and space. The site features a dedicated Vintage Tech section, commissioned character art, and a heartfelt manifesto about recapturing the spirit of the old web, complete with a guestbook and TheOldNet webring membership.
2026-07-07 meta | One Terabyte of Kilobyte Age One Terabyte of Kilobyte Age is Olia Lialina's research blog documenting her deep dive into the GeoCities torrent archive, analyzing and celebrating the aesthetics, culture, and quirks of early web personal homepages. Posts cover everything from MIDI files and under-construction GIFs to ontologies of old-web design patterns, making it a fascinating scholarly and nostalgic excavation of 1990s-2000s internet culture.
2026-07-07 Midnight Town - Home Eris's personal corner of the web, Midnight Town, is built around a love of vintage Macs and mechanical keyboards, with sections dedicated to cataloguing classic Apple hardware and exploring niche keyboard finds. The site embraces old-web nostalgia and is proudly made on an iMac G5, complete with webring memberships that capture the spirit of the early internet.