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Link Dump

...i found this and dropped it here.

today: 1 | this month: 11894 | latest: 2026-07-12 | total: 17088


  • 2026-07-07
    WhiskeyTangoHotel.Com
    WhiskeyTangoHotel.Com is a hobbyist electronics and amateur radio blog featuring hands-on projects like ESP32 microcontroller builds, temperature logging with Node-RED, and Morse code analysis tools. The site blends practical hardware tutorials with radio operator interests, making it a great find for tinkerers who enjoy cheap microcontrollers and DIY data visualization.
  • 2026-07-07
    www.aimspice.com
    AimSpice appears to be a SPICE circuit simulation software site, offering tools for electronic circuit analysis and modeling. The minimalist page redirects visitors to the main document, suggesting a focused software or technical resource for electronics engineers and hobbyists.
  • 2026-07-07
    web.textfiles.com
    Jason Scott's web.textfiles.com is a sprawling archive of historical text files covering hacking, phreaking, e-zines, humor, virus research, and underground computing culture from the BBS era and beyond. It's an essential digital preservation project cataloging thousands of documents that capture the raw, unfiltered voice of early internet and hacker subcultures.
  • 2026-07-07
    gnupg.org
    A chapter from the GNU Privacy Handbook covering the essentials of exchanging public keys using GnuPG, including exporting, importing, and validating keys via command-line tools. The guide walks through practical examples with real GPG commands, making it a valuable reference for anyone learning to use public-key cryptography with GnuPG.
  • 2026-07-07
    gor.net
    A bare-bones page from gor.net serving what appears to be an encyclopedia resource, with virtually no visible content beyond a single image. The site's minimal structure makes it difficult to assess its original purpose or scope.
  • 2026-07-07
    tilde.club
    A resource page by ~emv on tilde.club covering the tilde.* Usenet newsgroup hierarchy, complete with a 1996 FAQ and a list of newsreaders like tin, slrn, pine, and lynx. It's a charming slice of old-internet culture, pointing visitors toward groups for ASCII art, web history, projects, and food discussion on a modern tilde community server.
  • 2026-07-07
    2025 Directory of Directories
    Created and maintained by Marcus P. Zillman, this is a curated meta-directory that organizes and links to other directories across the web, serving as a one-stop resource for finding organized collections of links on virtually any topic. A classic old-web reference tool for researchers and web explorers who want to navigate the internet through structured, human-curated indexes.
  • 2026-07-07
    2026 Directory of Directories - Marcus P. Zillman
    Marcus P. Zillman's 2026 Directory of Directories is a massive curated reference collection covering hundreds of subject categories, from AI and biotechnology to genealogy and journalism. Created by a self-described eSolutions Architect and Internet expert, this long-running resource serves as a meta-directory linking to specialized resource guides across virtually every field of knowledge.
  • 2026-07-07
    2026 Guide To Searching the Internet
    Created by Marcus P. Zillman, this comprehensive guide covers both classic and AI-powered techniques for searching the internet effectively. A long-running reference work updated annually, it serves as a one-stop compendium for researchers, professionals, and curious users who want to get the most out of online search.
  • 2026-07-07
    A Legal Issues Primer for Open Source and Free Software Projects - Software Freedom Law Center
    Published by the Software Freedom Law Center, this comprehensive legal primer covers copyright, licensing, trademarks, and organizational issues specifically for free and open source software projects. Written by prominent FOSS legal experts including Eben Moglen and Bradley Kuhn, it walks developers through choosing licenses like the GPL, handling copyright enforcement, and structuring their organizations.
  • 2026-07-07
    A Visual History of Delicious Bookmarks -(outer outer space)-
    A richly researched visual history of Delicious, the pioneering social bookmarking site, tracing its design evolution through dozens of archived screenshots spanning over a decade. The creator reflects on digital ephemerality, the cultural impact of tagging and metadata, and what was lost when Delicious faded, making this a thoughtful and well-documented tribute to a formative piece of web history.
  • 2026-07-07
    A.H.Links - The Complete Web Site Links
    A.H.Links is an early 2000s web directory billing itself as 'the doorway to the Internet,' organizing hundreds of popular sites into categorized link collections covering everything from airlines and auctions to recipes and religion. The site also features a ranked Top 100 list of the hottest websites of the era, making it a fascinating time capsule of the early web landscape.
  • 2026-07-07
    Active FTP vs. Passive FTP, a Definitive Explanation
    A thorough technical reference explaining the difference between active and passive FTP modes, complete with command-line session examples and firewall configuration guidance. Widely linked and praised in networking communities, it covers the underlying port mechanics, firewall compatibility issues, and configuration for common FTP servers.
  • 2026-07-07
    Appendix A – - When to use the dot in a Zone File
    ZyTrax hosts a comprehensive technical reference covering DNS zone file syntax, specifically explaining the critical rules around when to use a trailing dot in resource records and the ORIGIN substitution rule. Part of a broader open guide library by Ron Aitchison, this page is a clear, authoritative explanation that demystifies one of the most confusing aspects of DNS configuration for sysadmins and network engineers.
  • 2026-07-07
    ASCII Table - ASCII Character Codes, HTML, Octal, Hex, Decimal
    A comprehensive reference site providing ASCII character tables with decimal, hex, octal, HTML, and binary codes for every character in the standard and extended ASCII sets. It also covers related encoding systems including EBCDIC, Unicode, ALT codes, and keyboard scan codes, making it a handy quick-reference for programmers and web developers.
  • 2026-07-07
    ASCII.co.uk - The home of all things ASCII
    ASCII.co.uk is a comprehensive hub for everything related to ASCII, offering art galleries, an ASCII code converter, symbol tables, URL encoding tools, and a text generator. Whether you're looking to explore user-created ASCII art, generate stylized text banners, or reference character codes, this site covers the full spectrum of plain-text culture.
  • 2026-07-07
    AUDIO.TEXTFILES.COM
    A massive audio archive from the textfiles.com project, collecting historical recordings from the early internet and hacker culture including conference speeches, phone phreaking pranks, and computer-themed music. Curated by Jason Scott, this repository preserves rare sound artifacts from hacker cons like DEF CON, telephone conferences, and other digital history ephemera.
  • 2026-07-07
    bekanar
    Bekanar's cozy corner of the web presents itself as a knowledge-sharing wiki covering topics the creator finds interesting. The decorative buttons and stamps prominently feature One Piece characters like Portgas D. Ace, Buggy the Clown, and Roronoa Zoro, giving the site a strong anime flavor alongside activist and fandom flair.
  • 2026-07-07
    Blogs about Science (ooh.directory)
    Created and maintained by Phil Gyford, ooh.directory is a curated collection of blogs organized by topic, with this section dedicated to science covering earth science, mathematics, space, medicine, and the natural world. Visitors can filter entries by country and update frequency, making it a handy hub for discovering active science blogs and subscribing via OPML or RSS.
  • 2026-07-07
    Bounty of bookmarks
    Felix's personal web directory collects over a thousand tagged and timestamped bookmarks spanning topics from climate and history to science, technology, and culture. Organized into themed categories like 'The History Hoard' and 'The Sci-Tech Stash,' it functions as a curated link library with highlighted reads on AI, meritocracy, and media criticism.
  • 2026-07-07
    CD-Recordable FAQ
    Andy McFadden's comprehensive CD-Recordable FAQ is the definitive reference guide covering everything about CD-R and CD-RW technology, from basic concepts to advanced topics like packet writing, disc formats, and hardware troubleshooting. Originally developed for the comp.publish.cdrom Usenet newsgroups, this meticulously maintained document reached version 2.73 and is available in multiple languages including German, French, Russian, and more.
  • 2026-07-07
    Chapter 8 - CNAME Record
    ZyTrax hosts a comprehensive technical reference guide covering DNS records, with this chapter dedicated to CNAME (Canonical Name Record) syntax, usage, and zone file examples. Part of a broader open guide by Ron Aitchison, the site spans DNS, LDAP, networking protocols, SSL/TLS, and much more, making it a deep technical resource for sysadmins and network engineers.
  • 2026-07-07
    Ciphers and Codes
    Tyler Akins' Rumkin.com hosts a comprehensive collection of browser-based cipher and code tools, covering everything from classic substitution ciphers like Caesar and Atbash to more obscure ones like Playfair and Übchi. Each tool automates the encoding and decoding process while explaining the underlying logic, making it a valuable reference for cryptography hobbyists and puzzle enthusiasts alike.
  • 2026-07-07
    Clay Shirky | Ontology is Overrated
    This page from the Conversations Network hosts a recorded talk by Clay Shirky titled 'Ontology is Overrated,' captured at the O'Reilly Emerging Technology Conference in 2005. Shirky, a noted writer and consultant on decentralization and social software, delivers a 44-minute audio presentation exploring why rigid classification systems are being challenged by the social web.
  • 2026-07-07
    CMC Magazine
    Web Rings as Computer-Mediated Communication: A 1999 academic article from CMC Magazine by Greg Elmer examining webrings as a form of computer-mediated communication, analyzing how web-based hyperlinks transformed online social interaction beyond traditional email and Usenet dialogues. Published in a special focus issue on web usability, it offers a scholarly perspective on how webrings functioned as networked communication infrastructure in the early commercial web era.
  • 2026-07-07
    Consumer Rights Wiki
    Consumer Rights Wiki is a community-built encyclopedia dedicated to documenting anti-consumer practices, corporate misconduct, and right-to-repair issues across industries. With over 1,150 articles covering everything from Samsung pushing ads to refrigerators to John Deere's aggressive repair restrictions, it serves as a vital reference for consumers navigating corporate overreach.
  • 2026-07-07
    Cool Links
    A sprawling personal link directory by rlcolem covering dozens of categories including health, government, entertainment, news, music, and museums. Built in classic late-90s tripod style, it curates hundreds of external links organized into neat topic sections, serving as a one-stop gateway to the early web.
  • 2026-07-07
    Delicious Bookmarks
    A massive archive of 10,561 bookmarks saved by tilde.club user miccaman via the Delicious bookmark service between 2005 and 2014, preserved here after Delicious shut down. The collection spans web design, programming, art, and internet culture, with a built-in linkrot analysis showing which URLs have gone dead over the years.
  • 2026-07-07
    Demystified
    Demystified breaks down complex technology topics into accessible explanations, covering artificial intelligence, blockchain, cryptocurrency, NFTs, login security, passkeys, DVD, and UltraViolet. It serves as a plain-language reference for anyone trying to make sense of modern tech jargon and digital systems.
  • 2026-07-07
    Deurachavich's Website
    Deurachavich's minimalist site hosts short opinion articles covering topics like AI, video essays, and online community dynamics. The self-deprecating author warns readers they 'live under a rock,' giving the sparse but thoughtful writing a candid, unconventional voice.

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