2026-07-07 Microsoft Windows Command-Line FTP Command List A comprehensive reference listing every command available in the Microsoft Windows command-line FTP client, drawn directly from Windows NT help files and organized with syntax details and parameter explanations. Developers and sysadmins will find it especially useful for scripting FTP tasks or troubleshooting command-line file transfers.
2026-07-07 Navas 28800-56K Modem FAQ The Navas 28800-56K Modem FAQ, compiled by John Navas, is a comprehensive reference guide covering dial-up modem troubleshooting, selection, configuration, and brand-specific tips for modems from the mid-1990s through the broadband transition era. Organized into detailed sections on connection problems, drivers, PCMCIA cards, and modem companies, it remains a thorough technical resource for anyone dealing with legacy dial-up hardware.
2026-07-07 nchrs – index Clemens Scott's personal digital garden, nchrs, organizes a personal knowledge database, project archives, and curated lists into a clean minimalist portal. The site participates in the Merveilles and Lieu webrings, situating it within the indie web community focused on intentional, self-hosted knowledge work.
2026-07-07 neowiki Neowiki is a community-maintained wiki dedicated to helping Neocities users navigate the platform, covering topics like the Neocities CLI, supporter plans, site profile customization, and style guides. Built by Neocities users for Neocities users, it serves as a practical reference hub for anyone building or managing a site on the platform.
2026-07-07 NetBSD/macppc Frequently Asked Questions The official NetBSD/macppc FAQ covers everything a user needs to install and run NetBSD on PowerPC-based Apple hardware, from booting and partitioning to Open Firmware, supported hardware models, and peripheral configuration. With dozens of detailed questions and answers spanning networking, ADB keyboards, USB devices, and kernel options, it serves as an indispensable technical reference for running this Unix-like OS on older Power Macs and PowerBooks.
2026-07-07 Nomoz Web Directory Nomoz is a human-edited general web directory launched as an alternative to the troubled DMOZ/Open Directory Project, allowing webmasters to submit, edit, and manage their own listings across dozens of categories. Built with direct webmaster input rather than volunteer editors, it aims to be a more transparent and SEO-friendly link directory covering everything from arts and entertainment to regional and shopping categories.
2026-07-07 ODP and Yahoo Size Charts Created by ODP editor geniac, this page tracks and compares the growth of the Open Directory Project (DMOZ) and Yahoo Directory through detailed size charts and milestone tables spanning 1998 to 2004. It's a fascinating historical snapshot of the early web directory wars, complete with projected vs. actual crossover dates and a Q&A section explaining the methodology behind the size calculations.
2026-07-07 Old'aVista Home: Old'aVista is a nostalgic search engine built specifically for finding old websites from classic hosting services like Geocities, Angelfire, Tripod, and AOL, complete with a retro AltaVista-inspired interface. It indexes a massive database of vintage web content and offers curated directories, top searches, and links to preservation resources like the Internet Archive.
2026-07-07 ongoing by Tim Bray · XML People Tim Bray, one of the co-creators of XML, writes a retrospective essay on the people and personalities who shaped XML's first decade, originally drafted in 1998 and finally published here in 2008. The piece offers rare insider portraits of figures like Ted Nelson, W3C members, and early web pioneers, making it a fascinating primary-source account of web standards history.
2026-07-07 Open Directory Project.org ODP Web Directory Built With the DMOZ RDF Database: A web directory built from the legendary DMOZ/Open Directory Project RDF database, organizing thousands of high-quality internet resources across categories ranging from Arts and Science to Regional and World languages. It carries on the spirit of the original ODP, offering a human-curated alternative to algorithmic search engines for those seeking organized, categorized links.
2026-07-07 PDF.TEXTFILES.COM Curated by Jason Scott of Textfiles.com fame, this archive collects and preserves a wide variety of PDF documents spanning academics, vintage zines, legal threats, technical manuals, pamphlets, and printable paper models. It serves as a fascinating digital library of internet ephemera, offering everything from classic books to fan magazines and digitized historical catalogs.
2026-07-07 People and Blogs People and Blogs is a weekly newsletter series created by Manu that spotlights interesting individuals and their personal blogs through interview-style profiles. The archive features hundreds of bloggers and their sites, making it a rich discovery resource for anyone looking to explore the indie web beyond social media.
2026-07-07 RadioStationWorld - Radio Broadcast Directory and Listing of Radio Stations on the Web RadioStationWorld, maintained by Thomas C. Hokenson since 1996, is a comprehensive global directory of radio stations browsable by region and covering AM, FM, digital, shortwave, satellite, hospital, campus, and cable radio. Visitors can find local stations with web presences, streaming webcasts, and links to broadcasting industry resources across North America, South America, Oceania, and Maritime Asia.
2026-07-07 RELAX NG Tutorial The official RELAX NG Tutorial, authored by James Clark and MURATA Makoto and published by OASIS in December 2001, provides a comprehensive introduction to the RELAX NG XML schema language. Covering everything from basic patterns and attributes to namespaces, modularity, and comparisons with XML DTDs, this specification-grade document is an essential reference for XML developers of the era.
2026-07-07 ResearchBuzz – News and resources covering social media, search engines, databases, archives, and other such information collections. Since 1998. ResearchBuzz has been covering the world of search engines, databases, archives, and online information resources since 1998, making it one of the longest-running research-focused web publications around. Run by a single author known as ResearchBuzz, the site pairs news commentary with a growing suite of original tools like SearchTweaks, Local Search America, and Congress Corral that help users get more out of Google, Wikipedia, and RSS feeds.
2026-07-07 Sci.Electronics.Repair FAQ Home Page: Samuel M. Goldwasser's massive electronics repair reference hub, featuring his legendary 'Notes on the Troubleshooting and Repair of...' series covering consumer electronics, lasers, and household devices. With over a thousand links to technology resources and the comprehensive Sam's Laser FAQ, this is a go-to destination for electronics hobbyists, technicians, and engineers tackling real-world repairs.
2026-07-07 Search Engine History.com Search Engine History.com, published by Aaron Wall, traces the full arc of search engine development from Vannevar Bush's 1945 vision of hypertext through the rise of Google, Yahoo, and Microsoft. Covering early directories, meta search, SEO, pay-per-click advertising, and legal battles, it serves as a comprehensive reference for anyone curious about how the modern web's information retrieval systems came to be.
2026-07-07 Search Engine Party Search Engine Party is a comprehensive comparison tool that rates dozens of popular and privacy-focused search engines across security and privacy criteria including IP logging, SSL grades, tracker use, and DNSSEC support. Researchers and privacy-conscious users will find it invaluable for choosing the safest search engine for their needs, with graded data sourced from community contributions and updated regularly.
2026-07-07 Search Engines of the World Search Engines of the World is a long-running directory cataloging internet search engines organized by geographic region, covering Africa, America, Asia, Australasia, Europe, and global resources. Dating back to 1996, it serves as a reference for finding region-specific search tools from around the globe.
2026-07-07 Search-22 | directory of search-tools Search-22 is a long-running directory of internet search tools, aggregating over 22 search engines including Google, DuckDuckGo, Yandex, Wolfram|Alpha, and many lesser-known alternatives in one convenient interface. Running since 2002, it organizes search resources by category including news, recipes, health, and humor, making it a handy meta-search launching pad for web veterans.
2026-07-07 Secret Onions - Your darkweb links directory Secret Onions is a community-maintained Tor hidden service link directory focused on legitimate content, tools, and knowledge rather than scammy dark web marketplaces. Curated with an anti-surveillance, pro-privacy philosophy, it organizes onion links into categories like forums, email services, file hosting, software, and search engines while actively filtering out scam and marketplace sites.
2026-07-07 Setting Up Your Own DNS (Kessler) Gary Kessler's 1996 technical article walks readers through setting up and maintaining their own DNS server on a TCP/IP network, covering domain name structure, resource records, and BIND configuration. Originally published in Network VAR magazine, it remains a solid historical reference for understanding how the Domain Name System works at an administrative level.
2026-07-07 SMTP ERROR CODES A technical reference page documenting SMTP error codes, protocol behavior, and related email delivery concepts including blacklists, spoofing, and RFC 821 standards. Visitors will find a structured listing of numeric response codes with plain-language explanations, making it a handy quick-reference for anyone troubleshooting email server issues.
2026-07-07 Social Bookmarking Tools (I) A General Review: Published in D-Lib Magazine in April 2005, this academic article by Tony Hammond and colleagues at Nature Publishing Group provides a comprehensive review of social bookmarking tools, covering platforms like del.icio.us, tagging systems, RSS feeds, and the emerging concept of the social web. It offers a detailed look at how user-driven bookmarking and tagging were reshaping information management on the early Web, making it a fascinating historical snapshot of Web 2.0 in its infancy.
2026-07-07 The Ascii Ribbon Campaign official homepage The official home of the ASCII Ribbon Campaign, an advocacy movement urging internet users to avoid HTML email and proprietary file attachments in favor of plain text. The site explains the technical and practical reasons behind the campaign, offers multilingual resources, and provides badge graphics for supporters to display on their own sites.
2026-07-07 The Blue Pages The Blue Pages is a curated old-web and indie-web directory that functions like a digital yellow pages, listing sites across dozens of categories including tilde servers, webrings, Gemini/Gopher hosts, and retro communities. Built as an alternative to algorithm-driven search engines, it embraces pure human-curated web indexing with a nostalgic small-web philosophy.
2026-07-07 The Hamster's New Home Winter 2006: A newsletter article from the ODP/DMOZ open directory project's Winter 2006 issue, humorously describing the migration to new servers through the perspective of fictional 'hamsters' powering the editors.dmoz.org infrastructure. Part of a regular newsletter for DMOZ editors, it covers server upgrades, editor initiatives, and community news from the volunteer-run web directory.
2026-07-07 The History of the Open Directory Project A detailed historical account of the Open Directory Project (ODP), tracing its origins from Rich Skrenta's 1998 GnuHoo experiment through its growth into a massive volunteer-edited web directory with over 597,000 sites and 11,500 editors. Published as part of a zine newsletter, it offers a fascinating inside perspective on the early chaos, politics, and community spirit that shaped one of the early web's most influential directories.
2026-07-07 The Intentional Journal of the Tildeverse | open journal for tildes The Intentional Journal of the Tildeverse is an open publishing platform where members of tilde communities like tilde.town and tilde.club can share long-form essays and research on any topic that sparks their curiosity. It functions as both a scholarly journal and a social space, offering peer review, constructive criticism, and community discussion for writers in the tilde ecosystem.
2026-07-07 The Jargon File The Jargon File is the legendary online lexicon of hacker slang, culture, and folklore, maintained by Eric S. Raymond (ESR) and covering everything from technical terminology to the sociology of hacker life. Version 4.4.7 includes a full glossary, essays on hacker writing and speech styles, appendices on hacker folklore, and a detailed portrait of hacker culture that has made this one of the most cited references in computing history.