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  • 2026-07-07
    Creating System Users And Groups
    A technical reference page by RJK covering how to create system users and groups across multiple UNIX platforms including Linux, Solaris, FreeBSD, OpenBSD, and Mac OS X. It details platform-specific commands and quirks for sysadmins who need to automate user creation in scripts for isolating services.
  • 2026-07-07
    creative chaos - creative chaos
    The personal blog of Deni Bačić, known online as b4d and s55db, a senior Linux admin and HPC sysop with experience at research institutions and tech organizations. The site covers a minimalist geek lifestyle touching on Linux, infosec, networking, server administration, and ham radio.
  • 2026-07-07
    Crystal's Website 💜
    Crystal is a 19-year-old Algerian hobbyist who hosts this open-source personal site on the tilde.institute pubNIX server, running Gentoo Linux with a detailed setup including a Dell P7510, Doom Emacs, and Plasma6. The site leans heavily into the indie web and Linux culture aesthetic, featuring blinkies, a guestbook, anti-corporate web badges, and notes on her computing environment alongside random thoughts and class notes.
  • 2026-07-07
    Cybrkyd
    Cybrkyd is a personal tech blog covering Linux tips, self-hosted tools, privacy-focused software, and everyday computing life. Posts range from practical how-tos on Tor Browser cursor themes and Git workflows to commentary on ISP censorship and open-source alternatives to mainstream apps.
  • 2026-07-07
    deepend — satellite
    Mike 'deepend' is a sysadmin and web developer from Alberta, Canada who operates tilde.club, thunix.net, and the NewNet IRC network, keeping retro-web community infrastructure running. His personal satellite page showcases his open-source projects including a PHP wiki, a shell community platform, and a Tildeverse banner exchange, all served with hand-rolled HTML and a CRT-style aesthetic.
  • 2026-07-07
    deepend — tilde.club
    Mike 'deepend' is the operator of tilde.club and thunix.net, sharing his work running Linux-based shell communities, IRC networks, and hand-rolled PHP projects for the tildeverse. A no-frills, retro-web personal page that doubles as a hub for his open-source infrastructure work, including a banner exchange, wiki, and the NewNet IRC network.
  • 2026-07-07
    DigitalVoid
    DigitalVoid is a personal hub by the creator 'digitalvoid_' featuring a cozy, old-web aesthetic complete with a Comfy Fireplace Pepe, Linux and Debian badges, and a no-cookies, no-copyright philosophy. The site serves as a central launchpad for the creator's blog, links, and other web submissions with a distinctly retro, free-and-open-web spirit.
  • 2026-07-07
    DistroWatch.com
    Put the fun back into computing. Use Linux, BSD.: DistroWatch is the definitive reference for tracking Linux and BSD distributions, offering news, release announcements, package comparisons, and a famous page-hit ranking that serves as a popularity index for hundreds of distros. Whether you are a seasoned sysadmin or a curious newcomer, the site's beginner guides, weekly newsletter, and exhaustive distribution database make it an indispensable hub for the open-source OS community.
  • 2026-07-07
    Diyar Ciftci 🇵🇸
    Diyar Ciftci's personal site doubles as a privacy-focused infrastructure hub, offering mirrors of projects like the Tor Project and Rsync, alongside self-hosted services accessible via clearnet, Tor, and I2P. Blog posts tackle topics like Cloudflare criticism, package management, and free speech, reflecting a strong interest in open networks and internet freedom.
  • 2026-07-07
    Dragon’s notes | Posts about IT, photography and bicycles.
    Eugene Andrienko's personal tech blog covers FreeBSD, NetBSD, and Linux topics with detailed how-to guides on everything from configuring X11 to installing open-source firmware on ThinkPads. The site also features photography collections and occasional bicycle content, but the dominant focus is clearly Unix-like operating systems and open-source software.
  • 2026-07-07
    drkhsh
    The personal hub of drkhsh, an anarchist cyberpunk hacker and programmer who documents their open-source projects, Unix ricing setups, ASCII/ANSI textmode art, and rave culture. The site connects to a wiki, git repositories, a blog, and textmode art gallery, with a strong focus on privacy, decentralized networks, and obscure operating systems.
  • 2026-07-07
    Dynebolic | Liberate yourself from mental slavery and try something different on your computer.
    Dynebolic is a 100% free GNU+Linux live distribution created by the Dyne.org foundation, designed to run from a USB stick with no installation required and a focus on multimedia production for those who cannot afford expensive equipment. Built around principles of digital freedom and resistance against corporate control, it includes a complete suite of free software tools for creating and sharing media without spending a cent.
  • 2026-07-07
    electro·pizza
    Ryan Oles runs electro.pizza, a personal tech blog covering self-hosting projects, software-defined radio experiments, and single-board computer builds like the Odroid XU4 and Pocket CHIP. The writing section features hands-on hardware and Linux tinkering write-ups, while a reading log tracks an impressively deep backlog of over 125 books.
  • 2026-07-07
    eris meow :3
    Eris's personal homepage blends cat-themed personality with genuine technical depth, showcasing her Linux setup (Arch, naturally), sysadmin work, self-hosted services, and a custom CSS editor built right into the page. Visitors will find sona art, tech specs for her desktop and laptop, a fediverse presence, and playful interactive features like a push notification sender and rotating sandwiches.
  • 2026-07-07
    esgeroth
    Pete Rijks (esgeroth) presents his personal homepage styled as a Unix terminal session, complete with a mock login prompt and ls -l directory listing as navigation. The site contains sections on hardware, software, history, and a log, with a distinctly geeky aesthetic that includes membership in the geekring and Fediring webrings.
  • 2026-07-07
    Find
    Bruce Barnett's comprehensive tutorial on the Unix 'find' command covers everything from basic file searching to advanced techniques using xargs, cpio, file permissions, and expressions. Part of the larger Grymoire Unix reference collection, this page is a go-to resource for anyone looking to master one of the most essential Unix/Linux command-line tools.
  • 2026-07-07
    Flarn2006's Blog
    Hacking the Bose Soundtouch, and its Linux-based OS: Flarn2006's tech blog documents hacking the Bose SoundTouch home stereo system to access its hidden embedded Linux shell via telnet, complete with step-by-step instructions. A curious find for hardware hackers and Linux enthusiasts, this post reveals the hidden operating system lurking inside a popular consumer audio device.
  • 2026-07-07
    FreeBSD Handbook | FreeBSD Documentation Portal
    The official FreeBSD Handbook is a comprehensive, multi-part reference guide covering everything from installation and basic system administration to networking, security, and the ports system. A true labor of love maintained by the FreeBSD community since 1994, it serves as the definitive manual for both new users and experienced sysadmins working with this Unix-like operating system.
  • 2026-07-07
    Fullmetalbrackets
    Ariel Diaz runs this tech-focused blog covering self-hosting, Linux, Docker, and hobbyist home server projects, with detailed tutorials on tools like Tailscale, Nginx Proxy Manager, and Debian. Popular posts walk through real-world setups including NAS configuration, reverse proxies, and remote access solutions, making it a practical resource for home lab enthusiasts.
  • 2026-07-07
    gettie's space
    Gettie is a Greek hobbyist sysadmin who maintains this personal corner of the web, including a microblog, a toki pona page, and links to services like catto.garden across clearnet, Tor, I2P, Gemini, and Gopher. The site's embrace of alternative protocols, webrings, and a strong anti-AI stance make it a charming artifact of the indie web ethos.
  • 2026-07-07
    Gmail on Home Linux Boxes using Postfix and Fetchmail
    Mike Chirico's detailed step-by-step tutorial walks home Linux users through configuring Postfix and Fetchmail to send and receive Gmail with SASL authentication and TLS encryption. The guide covers mail server setup, fetchmail with STARTTLS, inter-home-network mail forwarding, and automated email backups, making it a thorough reference for self-hosted Linux mail on a home network.
  • 2026-07-07
    harakiri
    Juniper's personal homepage blends old-web aesthetics with a tech-savvy identity, covering Linux self-hosting, email hosting, and server specs alongside interests in languages, worldbuilding, and philosophy. The site features a guestbook, 88x31 buttons, a worldbuilding project link, and a lively mix of personal favorites spanning anime, music, and books.
  • 2026-07-07
    Hari's Weblog
    Hari Mohan's personal weblog documents his journey as a university student and sysadmin, with a strong focus on NixOS, self-hosting, containers, and Linux system administration. Posts like the multi-part 'Nixmas' series offer thoughtful technical write-ups alongside honest personal reflections on writing and perfectionism.
  • 2026-07-07
    haskal
    Rose (haskal) maintains this minimalist tilde.town personal page packed with contact details across Mastodon, Matrix, XMPP, IRC, and more, with a strong emphasis on encrypted communications and open protocols. The site links to personal projects hosted at lain.faith, references PinePhone devices, and carries a cyberpunk aesthetic that signals a deeply technical, privacy-conscious corner of the indie web.
  • 2026-07-07
    hdjenkov
    hdjenkov is the minimalist personal homepage of a self-described 'random nerd from the Balkans,' featuring links to their Mastodon, a Matrix server, and a Nix configuration repository. The ASCII art header and nix-config project link signal a Linux/Nix enthusiast with a fondness for terminal aesthetics and open-source tooling.
  • 2026-07-07
    Home
    Soulmaze is a personal Neocities site featuring art, journaling, and a handy tutorial on listening to MIDIs in Linux, with the creator aiming to make the operating system more approachable. The site also includes Islamic prayer time widgets, webring participation, and a cozy old-web aesthetic with plenty of buttons and banners.
  • 2026-07-07
    home
    Pinecone's personal site showcases a wide range of technical and creative interests, with a particular focus on GNU/Linux GUI ricing, programming in Python and Vala, and audio/MIDI work. The site has a playful tone and links to projects on Codeberg, music on Mirlo, and games on Scratch, making it a charming window into the life of a recent University of Washington graduate.
  • 2026-07-07
    Home
    The personal site of 0x19, a technically-minded individual who writes about computing, privacy, and the open web with a distinct philosophical bent, including resources on Tor and I2P for anonymous browsing. The site reflects a deep frustration with modern internet culture alongside a genuine love for old-school computing ideals, featuring a portfolio, gaming section, and a picoblog alongside cryptocurrency donation options.
  • 2026-07-07
    Home
    Hex's Den is the personal site of Hexaitos, a self-described shapeshifting creature from Germany who documents their passion for Unix-derived systems, Linux distros like EndeavourOS and Fedora, languages, photography, and obscure music. The site includes sections for art, writings, a tech area, a button collection, and links to side projects including a bird-of-prey image API and a therianthropy index.
  • 2026-07-07
    Home - box.matto.nl
    Matto's personal tech blog centers on open source operating systems like OpenBSD, FreeBSD, and Linux, with a deep appreciation for plain text workflows, TUI applications, and the Gopher/Gemini smol web. Posts range from self-hosting guides like deploying a Matrix server on FreeBSD to book roundups, making it a cozy corner of the web for open source enthusiasts.
  • 2026-07-07
    Home - pancakes
    Pancakes is an Australian cat enby who shares programming projects, Linux guides, and Fediverse tools including RSS-to-Mastodon utilities and Iceshrimp bots. The site features blog posts on topics like running Minecraft on Waydroid and comparing Misskey forks, alongside links to their open-source contributions on Codeberg and Forgejo.
  • 2026-07-07
    Home Page
    Penelope Gwen (pogmommy) is a queer technologist and sociologist who documents her self-hosted federated services, Linux software projects in Rust and Bash, and adventures running modern Linux on vintage hardware. The site showcases her 'Pogmom Suite' of open-source federated tools, links to her Forgejo and Codeberg repositories, and a project blog covering niche hardware tinkering.
  • 2026-07-07
    Home | Opinionated Guides
    Opinionated Guides by vegadeftwing is a sprawling self-described journey from 'normie to neckbeard technomancer,' covering Linux, hardware, programming, math, physics, and even music synthesis in depth. The site's opinionated, tutorial-heavy approach makes it a rare gem for self-taught engineers who want a structured but personality-filled curriculum.
  • 2026-07-07
    Homepage - Raymii.org
    Remy van Elst is a Dutch developer and former Linux/UNIX sysadmin who shares in-depth technical articles on C++, Qt, Ansible, Kubernetes, MQTT, and embedded systems. The site is a treasure trove of practical tutorials and write-ups covering real-world DevOps and systems programming challenges.
  • 2026-07-07
    homepage on jacksonchen666.com
    Jackson (jacksonchen666) is a self-described computer toucher who self-hosts an impressive array of their digital life, runs Gentoo Linux, and shares random knowledge through a blog and personal wiki. The site spans blog posts, userscripts, an osu!lazer skin, self-hosted git mirrors, and even access via Tor, I2P, Gemini, and Yggdrasil, making it a genuinely eclectic technical personal hub.
  • 2026-07-07
    Index - ari.lt
    The personal site of Arija A. (Ari Archer), a Lithuanian developer who shares FOSS tools, a microblog, webshrines, and self-hosted services built on Alpine Linux, Nginx, Python, and Flask. Visitors can explore online utilities like a TTY theme generator, maze solver, and RSS validator, alongside Ari's Gentoo Linux overlay and TOR-accessible mirror.
  • 2026-07-07
    Index - Wirlaburla
    Wirlaburla's personal site is a nerdy hub featuring software, a gallery, music, videos, and junk links, with a strong open-source and Linux identity signaled by badges like 'Linux Now!', 'XLibre', and membership in the Geekring and *nix Ring webrings. The site also offers multiple access protocols including Clearnet, Gopher, and Onion, making it a classic indie web presence with a distinctly technical, free-software ethos.
  • 2026-07-07
    Index of /
    rw.rs is a tilde-style shared Unix server hosting dozens of personal user directories, each linked from this index page. Part of the tildeverse community, it offers a glimpse into the collaborative, old-web culture of public-access shell servers where users carve out their own corners of the web.
  • 2026-07-07
    Introduction | VirtualBSD 9.0
    VirtualBSD 9.0 is a project offering a desktop-ready FreeBSD 9.0-RELEASE pre-configured with the XFCE desktop environment and distributed as a VMware/VirtualBox appliance, making FreeBSD accessible to newcomers and returning users alike. The site includes download links, screenshots, how-to guides, and a curated list of bundled applications like Firefox, LibreOffice, GIMP, and VLC for an out-of-the-box experience.
  • 2026-07-07
    iPod Linux - Linux for your iPod
    The iPodLinux Project is an open source effort to port a customized uClinux kernel onto Apple iPods, complete with a custom interface called podzilla and additional modules that extend far beyond Apple's stock firmware. Visitors can find installation guides, troubleshooting docs, a project status tracker, and a full list of supported iPod generations, making it an essential hub for anyone wanting to run Linux on their device.
  • 2026-07-07
    Jake's Mail
    Jake runs his own personal email server on a budget VPS and uses this page to explain why he won't be offering accounts to anyone else, with candid commentary on privacy, law enforcement subpoenas, and the limitations of cloud hosting. The page is a refreshingly honest and humorous look at self-hosted email infrastructure, touching on rDNS, VPS trade-offs, and the surveillance risks of third-party hosting.
  • 2026-07-07
    Jake's Thoughts
    Jake's personal site blends technical blog posts about Linux, Nginx, DNS, SSH, and self-hosting with lighter entries on games and anime. The server-tinkering content dominates, covering topics like firewall configuration, cgit setup, GPU passthrough, and running services over Tor and Gemini.
  • 2026-07-07
    jan0sch.de
    Jan0sch's personal tech blog covers FreeBSD, Linux, and open-source tooling with practical how-to posts on topics like software RAID repair, Wireguard VPN, and terminal mail clients. The site also has a retro computing interest (C64) and personal sections, but the bulk of posts dive deep into Unix-like systems administration and development.
  • 2026-07-07
    janfrode’s notes
    Jan-Frode Myklebust's technical notes cover enterprise Linux administration, IBM GPFS/Spectrum Scale storage, KVM virtualization, and high-performance computing on IBM Power systems. A practical reference full of hands-on configuration guides for sysadmins working with serious storage infrastructure.
  • 2026-07-07
    Jonathan Dowland's Weblog
    Jonathan Dowland's weblog covers Linux, Debian, and open-source software development with a technical depth that rewards curious readers. Posts range from creating custom font glyphs for the Debian swirl to shell prompt customization and FOSDEM conference coverage.
  • 2026-07-07
    k3can blog
    Adam Behr's k3can blog covers a wide range of tech hobbyist topics including Meshtastic mesh networking, Raspberry Pi projects, Linux security, retro computing, and ham radio. Posts range from hands-on hardware tinkering to thoughtful commentary on small web culture and self-hosting, making it a rewarding read for technically curious readers.
  • 2026-07-07
    kait site
    Kait's minimal personal homepage doubles as a contact directory, listing every possible way to reach them across XMPP, IRC, Fediverse, Gopher, Tor, Gemini, Signal, and more. The site's tongue-in-cheek humor and shoutout to Plan 9 from Bell Labs signals a deeply technical, old-internet-savvy personality.
  • 2026-07-07
    Karl Newestman
    Karl Newestman's personal corner of the indie web covers his interests in Linux (Arch, naturally), FOSS, programming, and a dash of solarpunk philosophy. The site includes a blog, a shared library, a coins section for his budding coin collection, and a guestbook, all wrapped in a charmingly self-aware intro.
  • 2026-07-07
    Kirch's Stupid ~ Tricks
    Kirch shares a concise collection of clever SSH and terminal tricks for tilde.town users, covering topics like reconnecting to screen sessions, tunneling through HTTPS proxies, and managing authorized keys. The tips are practical and specific, making it a handy reference for anyone navigating Unix-style remote shell environments.
  • 2026-07-07
    Lily's Things at The Cool Site
    Lily's personal homepage is a charmingly chaotic corner of the web run by a self-described hot gamer girl who quad-boots Arch Linux, Windows 10, macOS, and FreeBSD. Packed with strong opinions on music, rhythm games, OLED dark mode, and open-source web culture, it's a love letter to the indie web aesthetic with handwritten HTML and a last.fm integration.
  • 2026-07-07
    Linux Commands - A practical reference
    A comprehensive Linux command line reference packed with practical, copy-paste-ready examples covering everything from file searching and text manipulation to networking, disk management, and process control. Available in multiple languages and PDF format, this cheat sheet by pixelbeat.org is an invaluable quick-reference for both beginners and seasoned Linux users.
  • 2026-07-07
    Linux Guide and Hints - Linux Guide and Hints
    Linux Guide and Hints is a technical documentation site by remyabel and nazunalika covering system administration for Fedora, Rocky Linux, and CentOS Stream. It includes tutorials on FreeIPA, OpenLDAP, PXE booting, IPv6 tunnels, SELinux best practices, and exam prep for enterprise Linux certifications.
  • 2026-07-07
    Linux Manpages Online - man.cx manual pages
    man.cx hosts Linux manual pages online, making classic command-line documentation accessible through a web browser without needing a terminal. This particular page covers the Dutch-language translation of the chmod(1) manpage, with the full command reference available in over a dozen languages.
  • 2026-07-07
    LinuxRing
    LinuxRing (also called *nixRing) is a webring connecting personal websites whose owners use Linux, Unix-like, or other alternative operating systems such as Haiku or Plan9. It features a growing directory of member sites spanning FOSS advocacy, tech writing, personal blogs, and programming projects, with OS-specific icons like Tux to represent each member's system.
  • 2026-07-07
    Loganius' Site – my home on the interwebs
    Loganius is a Midwest-based hobbyist who blogs about programming, retro tech, and Linux from his personal corner of the web. The site preserves his old content alongside new posts and includes a fun detail: membership in the Appliance Ring, a webring represented by his actual rice cooker.
  • 2026-07-07
    lunartic's bunker
    Lunartic is a Brazilian PHP web developer and computer engineering student who has built a self-hosted personal bunker on a Raspberry Pi, featuring a diary, guestbook, mood tracker, and an Arch Linux desktop showcase. The site leans into the indie web aesthetic with a terminal-style ASCII header, last.fm integration, gopher hole support, and a changelog that reveals a tinkerer constantly refining the setup.
  • 2026-07-07
    LXR linux/
    LXR (Linux Cross Reference) is a powerful source code browser for the Linux kernel, allowing developers to navigate and search through dozens of kernel versions from v2.6 through v6.7. It provides hyperlinked, indexed access to the full Linux kernel source tree, making it an invaluable reference tool for kernel developers and systems programmers.
  • 2026-07-07
    Lynx thoughts
    Lynx Thoughts is the minimalist microblog of Luxferre, a self-described cyberpunk enthusiast who posts frequent short entries about Linux setups, shell scripting, POSIX tools, Raspberry Pi tinkering, and local server experiments. The site is built with no JavaScript, no cookies, and no frameworks, and is even compatible with the text-based Lynx browser, making it a charming artifact of deliberate low-tech philosophy.
  • 2026-07-07
    MAC_Find
    How to find/display your MAC Address - Unix/Linux: A practical reference guide covering how to find and display your MAC address across a wide range of Unix and Linux operating systems, including Linux, Solaris, FreeBSD, HP-UX, AIX, and more. Each OS gets its own step-by-step instructions with real command-line output examples, making it a handy quick-reference for network administrators and Unix users alike.
  • 2026-07-07
    Martin Keegan
    All posts: Martin Keegan's personal blog covers a wide range of topics from his co-founding of the SRCF (a Cambridge UNIX shell access club) to UK housing policy, information rights, and technology commentary. Written for a niche audience, the site blends dry wit with substantive posts on Linux culture, voluntary organisations, and political causes.
  • 2026-07-07
    MC Tutorial
    Jane Trembath's comprehensive tutorial on Midnight Commander, the powerful console file manager for Linux, walks readers through everything from basic navigation and keyboard shortcuts to FTP transfers, Samba networking, and advanced operations like installing from source. The well-structured guide covers Mac usage as well, making it a handy reference for both new and experienced terminal users who want to get the most out of mc.
  • 2026-07-07
    MDOC(7)
    The official reference manual for mdoc, the semantic markup language used to write Unix manual pages, hosted on the mandoc.bsd.lv project site. Written by Kristaps Dzonsons, this comprehensive document covers mdoc syntax, macro overview, language structure, and compatibility with groff and other implementations.
  • 2026-07-07
    megalokafes
    Megalokafes is a personal neocities page from a self-described chronic distro hopper exploring Chimera Linux, the Gemini protocol, and alternative internet clients like Bombadillo. The site also features pointed commentary on LLMs and big tech, plus links to other indie web communities and a no-AI webring.
  • 2026-07-07
    mlot ~.♣
    A tilde.club user page for mlot, featuring links to various protocols including Gemini, Gopher, and finger, along with personal repos on Tildeforge and a Smolnet Portal for exploring the small web. The page reflects the spirit of the indie/smol web community, with connections to emergency info projects and the tilde community ecosystem.
  • 2026-07-07
    mnlab.xyz
    Claudia's personal corner of the web where she writes as a network engineer and Linux administrator with a love for privacy, email, and open-source culture. The site features musings on static site setups, links to tech-forward articles, OpenPGP contact info, and a charming Nord Theme-inspired ASCII art aesthetic.
  • 2026-07-07
    mochienya
    Mochienya is a self-described tech nerd's personal homepage covering her journey learning Linux (NixOS), Rust, and TypeScript for fun and career growth. The site links to her devblogs and is part of the nixwebr.ing webring, making it a cozy corner of the nerd web.
  • 2026-07-07
    monotux.tech
    Monotux.tech is a technical blog covering NixOS, self-hosting, networking, and DevOps topics with posts on tools like Ansible, Kubernetes, Woodpecker CI, and Hugo. The site features a rich archive of hands-on guides and notes spanning infrastructure, container management, monitoring, and Linux system administration.
  • 2026-07-07
    MP3 Blogs and wget
    Jeff Veen's 2004 blog post walks through using the wget command-line utility to automatically scrape and download MP3s from music blogs on a daily basis. The post breaks down each command-line flag in detail, making it a practical tutorial for anyone wanting to build a personal automated music collection from the early mp3 blog scene.
  • 2026-07-07
    My tilde.club page
    A tilde.club personal page by schroeder, consisting of a curated link collection focused on Linux distros, open-source operating systems, virtualization tools, and privacy-focused computing projects. From Qubes OS and Plan 9 to Proxmox and Parrot Linux, it serves as a handy reference for anyone deep in the open-source and self-hosted computing world.
  • 2026-07-07
    My tilde.club page
    A bare-bones tilde.club personal page belonging to user b10m, part of the classic Unix-style shared server community where members access their pages via secure shell. Nearly untouched from its default state, it participates in the tilde.club webring and links to the community's introductory primer.
  • 2026-07-07
    My tilde.club page
    A bare-bones tilde.club user page, part of the shared Unix social server community where members edit their public HTML files via shell access. The page is essentially a default placeholder, pointing visitors to a beginner's guide and linking into the tilde.club webring.
  • 2026-07-07
    My tilde.club page
    A barebones tilde.club member page for user 'juest', part of the retro Unix shared-server community where members log in via shell to edit their public HTML files. The page links to the tilde.club webring and a beginner's guide, capturing the minimalist DIY spirit of the tilde community movement.
  • 2026-07-07
    nelle.observer ~/
    Nelle's personal hub covers her work in computing, self-hosting, photography, and creative projects, with links to her git forges, YouTube channels, and Fediverse presence. The site has a charming terminal-inspired aesthetic and serves as a central index for everything she makes and shares across the web.
  • 2026-07-07
    nix webring
    The Nix Webring connects personal websites of enthusiasts passionate about NixOS and the Nix package manager, with 49 members and 45 of them sharing links to their Nix configuration files. It functions as both a community ring and a distributed repository of NixOS configs, with automatic 24-hour health checks on all member sites.
  • 2026-07-07
    notes
    A sprawling technical notes site by neeasade, covering Linux ricing, NixOS configurations, Emacs workflows, shell scripting, and window manager setups like BSPWM. The site reads like a living knowledge base, blending personal projects, automation tips, and occasional musings into one well-linked archive.
  • 2026-07-07
    nydragon's corner
    Nydragon's corner is a personal homepage for a self-hosting enthusiast who manages their infrastructure with Nix and champions privacy over big tech solutions. The site highlights their homelab stack including Navidrome, Forgejo, and Jellyfin, and showcases their toolbox of Rust, Nix, C/C++, and Linux.
  • 2026-07-07
    OK, turing.
    A terminal-style site running what appears to be a live Plan 9 operating system session, displaying real-time process listings, namespace bindings, and system output from a cpu0 node. It offers a fascinating window into Plan 9 from Bell Labs in action, with timestamped shell sessions and moon phase data scrolling alongside raw OS internals.
  • 2026-07-07
    Open Source Musings
    Scott Nesbitt's blog covers Linux and open source software with a non-techie slant, making it accessible to everyday users rather than hardcore developers. Posts range from command-line tool guides to app roundups for FOSS Android apps, desktop utilities, and productivity software for the Linux desktop.
  • 2026-07-07
    Ori's Weird Blog
    Orion Moonclaw's personal tech blog covers Linux VR, game modding, and the free XR stack, with posts ranging from running Fedora on a phone to haptics hardware on Linux. The site blends furry/alterhuman identity with serious technical writing, making it a quirky and genuinely informative corner of the indie web.
  • 2026-07-07
    Other Tildes
    Maintained by ~pfhawkins on tilde.club, this page is a curated directory of active tilde servers from across the tildeverse, complete with descriptions and signup links for each community. It serves as an essential jumping-off point for anyone interested in joining a public-access Unix shell community, with entries ranging from OpenBSD privacy-focused servers to the world's only Windows-based tilde.
  • 2026-07-07
    Patrick Wu's Space
    Patrick Wu's technical blog covers Linux, WSL (Windows Subsystem for Linux), self-hosting, and open-source development, with posts ranging from PC-98 emulation on Fedora to Rust debugging in VSCode. Patrick is a speaker at events like Microsoft Build and Ubucon Asia, lending his site a professional depth that complements its hands-on tutorials.
  • 2026-07-07
    Paul Ford's tilde.club home page
    Paul Ford's home on tilde.club, the shared Unix server community he accidentally founded, featuring his web journal, letters to the mailing list, and reflections on the tildeverse movement. It chronicles the origin story of tilde.club and the philosophy behind collaborative multi-user Unix spaces as a throwback to early internet culture.
  • 2026-07-07
    personal code attic
    Known as 'personal code attic', this technical blog by mhitza covers Linux system administration, programming tutorials, and development environment setups with a focus on practical problem-solving. Visitors will find posts on topics like CentOS Stream migration, LVM snapshots, Ansible playbooks, and even Arduino assembly programming.
  • 2026-07-07
    Planet Grep - Planet'ing Belgian FLOSS people
    Planet Grep is an aggregator of blog posts from Belgian free and open source software (FLOSS) contributors, maintained by Wouter Verhelst. It pulls together feeds from dozens of Belgian developers, system administrators, and open source advocates, making it a lively hub for the Belgian Linux and FLOSS community.
  • 2026-07-07
    Plantay's Weblog
    Dima (alias plantay) runs this personal weblog covering Linux, the small web, experimental audio, motion graphics, and self-sufficiency with an impressive 36,000+ words across 68 pages. The site is a thoughtful digital home base with weeknotes, a bookshelf, bookmarks, and micro-posts that give a genuine window into a creative technologist's daily life.
  • 2026-07-07
    Plots, Graphs, and Curves in the World of Linux LG #103
    A 2004 Linux Gazette article by Ben Okopnik walking readers through creating plots, graphs, and curves on Linux using gnuplot, complete with syntax explanations and example output images. It surveys the landscape of Linux plotting tools before diving into practical gnuplot tutorials, making data visualization accessible to non-engineers.
  • 2026-07-07
    poz
    Poz (also known as imnotpoz) runs this personal site centered on their deep interest in the Linux userspace, programming, and current rabbit holes including Standard ML, seL4, and ARM. The site features posts, notes, projects, and a guestbook, and participates in several webrings including the nix and CSS joy webrings.
  • 2026-07-07
    Protecting a Laptop from Simple and Sophisticated Attacks - grepular.com
    Mike Cardwell's grepular.com hosts a detailed technical article on securing an Ubuntu-based Lenovo ThinkPad against everything from common theft to sophisticated cryptographic attacks like evil maid and coldboot exploits. The post covers honeypot OS setups, full disk encryption strategies, boot partition isolation on a USB stick, and RAM-clearing defenses, making it a compelling read for security-minded Linux users.
  • 2026-07-07
    prussia fan club
    Prussia's personal blog and technical corner covers Linux, free software, privacy, and programming projects including a custom window manager called ming-wm. Posts range from hash functions and captcha rewrites to manga translation critiques and Wikipedia rabbit holes, making it a eclectic but distinctly tech-leaning old-web hangout.
  • 2026-07-07
    Q4OS - desktop operating system
    Q4OS is a lightweight Debian-based desktop Linux distribution focused on speed, stability, and ease of use for both beginners and experienced users. The official project site offers downloads, documentation, and news about releases including ARM editions and a unique Windows installer that lets the OS run natively alongside Windows.
  • 2026-07-07
    Quiet System - sink on uwu
    Yellowsink's personal tech blog covers a wide range of topics including Linux server administration, low-level programming, VR on Linux, audio systems, and DIY hardware projects. Posts are detailed and technically engaged, ranging from compiler internals to smartwatch reviews to self-hosted DNS setups.
  • 2026-07-07
    rawtext.club
    rawtext.club is a small community shell server offering access to shell accounts, local email, and hosting for gemini, gopher, and HTML content, embracing a slow, deliberate approach to internet culture. Users can connect via local chat and participate in a community built around a shared social contract and a philosophy of minimalism and intentionality online.
  • 2026-07-07
    Regi's Web Vault
    Regi's Web Vault is the personal homepage of Regianus, a 21-year-old tech-loving furry from Portugal who shares their Linux setup, open-source advocacy, and old-web aesthetics complete with webrings, buttons, and a running update log. The site leans heavily into free software culture, sporting anti-Microsoft and anti-AI badges alongside a AMD-powered Linux rig, making it a fun snapshot of modern indie web enthusiasm.
  • 2026-07-07
    sarmonsiill | tilde.guru
    Sarmonsiill's personal tilde page on tilde.guru, a tildeverse community they founded to explore FreeBSD and contribute to the shared unix hosting scene. The site reflects decades of experience with *nix systems, BSD variants, and programming, with links to a blog, a brief log, and a static blog tool called 'ago'.
  • 2026-07-07
    SDF Public Access UNIX System - Free Shell Account and Shell Access
    SDF Public Access UNIX System, established in 1987, offers free shell accounts and a community platform built around UNIX, the Fediverse, and vintage computing systems. Members can access services including Gopher, IRC, Git, Mastodon, Minecraft, Telnet, and even dialup, making it a remarkable living piece of internet history.
  • 2026-07-07
    Sean Young's linux ramblings
    Sean Young's technical blog covers Linux kernel development, with a focus on rc-core subsystem maintenance, PEG parser generators in Rust, and hands-on guides for running ARM64 VMs and GitHub Actions runners. A great resource for Linux enthusiasts and kernel developers looking for detailed, code-heavy writeups on low-level system topics.
  • 2026-07-07
    Services
    Custom Desktop Solutions is a consulting service page advocating for Free and Open Source Software, offering help with Linux desktop setup, computer literacy, hardware configuration, and small office/home office solutions. The site highlights practical services like extending the life of older PCs by converting them to Linux and helping clients establish an internet presence.
  • 2026-07-07
    Setting up your own tilde club (UNIX)
    Edwin Wenink walks readers through every step of setting up a tilde club server on Linux, from spinning up a cloud VM to configuring nginx, SSH access, and community tools. Written during the COVID-19 lockdown as a social coding experiment, the guide is detailed and conversational at over 2,400 words.
  • 2026-07-07
    SHRIK3
    SHRIK3 is a technically focused personal blog by a developer who writes extensively about Linux, Arch, Nix, Neovim, shell configuration, and low-level computing topics like ANSI escape codes and LUKS encryption. The site also includes volatile frequently-updated pages, music notes, a git-log-style changelog, and a webring, making it a rich and eclectic technical corner of the web.
  • 2026-07-07
    shring sh webring
    Shring is a curated webring connecting Unix-flavored personal sites, styled with a terminal aesthetic and command-line syntax throughout. Its 13 members share a love of Linux, BSD, programming, and tinkering, making it a neat hub for discovering small, technically-minded corners of the web.

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