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11990 links · page 52 of 120


  • 2026-07-07
    Kaiteng
    Kaiteng is a sparse personal page with hints of Finnish and Kainuu regional identity, suggesting content related to Finnish language or translation. The site offers little visible content beyond an entry link, but its keywords point toward Finnish culture and possibly translation resources.
  • 2026-07-07
    Old postcards of Barnet
    A curated collection of old postcard scans from Barnet and its surrounding areas in North London, covering landmarks, streets, churches, and local events like the famous Barnet Fair. The site invites visitors to contribute their own postcard scans and includes related links to other local history resources in Hertfordshire and beyond.
  • 2026-07-07
    PhillyTalk.com
    PhillyTalk.com is a long-running Philadelphia-area site covering local talk radio stations, Philly slang and dialect, healthy low-carb diet tips, and regional news and opinions. Visitors can explore an audio vault of talk radio clips, a Philly slang guide, and a surprisingly deep section on keto-friendly nutrition alongside local media commentary.
  • 2026-07-07
    Pinoy Websites
    Pinoy Websites is a webring connecting Filipino people who have personal sites, blogs, portfolios, and passion projects from across the Philippines and beyond. With 19 members spanning web developers, writers, gamers, and diarists, it celebrates the diversity of the Filipino indie web.
  • 2026-07-07
    Polk County NC Veterans Page
    A community resource page dedicated to veterans in Polk County, North Carolina, providing contact information for local veterans services, links to VFW and American Legion Facebook groups, and a rich archive of Veterans Day parades and memorial park events dating back to 2002. The site also offers resources on in-home care assistance, suicide prevention, POW/MIA remembrance, and the Vietnam Memorial Wall.
  • 2026-07-07
    SCIWAY
    South Carolina's Front Door: SCIWAY (South Carolina Information Highway) bills itself as South Carolina's Front Door and serves as the largest comprehensive directory of SC information on the internet, covering jobs, businesses, cities, events, real estate, hotels, and more. A long-running community resource for residents, visitors, and anyone relocating to the Palmetto State, it features a photo project, local sponsorships, and curated guides to life in South Carolina.
  • 2026-07-07
    Sluggish Canine Enterprises
    Bix Frankonis' personal hub documents his midlife in St. Johns, Oregon, with a characteristically candid inventory of identities, impairments, worries, and a surprisingly rich history of internet projects spanning from the mid-1990s to present. The site serves as a linktree-style landing page pointing to his blog, social profiles, and an eclectic collection of side projects including Firefly fan work and Portland community efforts.
  • 2026-07-07
    Texas Escapes - All about Texas cities, towns, counties, history, legends, syndicated columns, trips, photos, vintage maps.
    Texas Escapes is a comprehensive online magazine dedicated to Texas history, towns, ghost towns, and travel, with over 3,393 cities covered across all 254 counties. Running since 1998, it features vintage maps, historic photos, syndicated columns, architecture, and regional trip guides that make it an invaluable resource for anyone exploring the Lone Star State.
  • 2026-07-07
    The Espressario
    Philippine Cybercafe Guide: The Espressario is a guide to cybercafes and coffeehouses in the Philippines, created around 1998 when internet cafes were just beginning to take root as cultural institutions. It covers cafe listings, coffee resources, and the emerging cyberculture scene in the Philippines, making it a fascinating snapshot of early internet access culture in Southeast Asia.
  • 2026-07-07
    Thorpe Mandeville, Northamptonshire
    A dedicated website about the history and community of Thorpe Mandeville, a small rural parish in south-west Northamptonshire, England, created by Maurice Cole. Visitors can explore parish registers, a brief village history, the local church, public houses, schools, military history, and notable people connected to this centuries-old settlement.
  • 2026-07-07
    Welcome to Holker.St
    Holker.St appears to be a personal homepage with minimal visible content beyond a welcome message, likely tied to a personal domain. The sparse page text makes it difficult to identify a dominant topic, but the domain name suggests a place-based or personal identity focus.
  • 2026-07-07
    ねおたうん🍊
    A Japanese-language Neocities personal site maintained by an enthusiast whose main passion is place names, featuring detailed columns on old town names in Suginami Ward, street address history, and neighborhood walks around Tokyo. The site also includes music notes, reading logs, baseball roster entries for the Swallows, and participates in the Neo-Nihongo Webring for Japanese-language Neocities creators.
  • 2026-07-07
    0x5f3759df | Hummus and Magnets
    Christian Plesner Hansen's technical blog dives deep into the legendary fast inverse square root hack and its magic constant 0x5f3759df, tracing the algorithm's surprising history from Ardent Computer in the 1980s through SGI, 3dfx, and Quake III Arena. The post rigorously explains the underlying floating-point bit manipulation, generalizes the technique to arbitrary powers, and includes graphs and mathematical derivations that illuminate why this 'evil' hack actually works.
  • 2026-07-07
    About – Alex Rutar
    Alex Rutar is a mathematics postdoctoral researcher specializing in fractal geometry, dynamical systems, and dimension theory, with affiliations at the University of Jyväskylä and a PhD from the University of St Andrews. His site serves as an academic hub linking to his publications, expository writing, CV, and open-source developer tools built around LaTeX and terminal utilities.
  • 2026-07-07
    Abuse of Notation - writings on math, logic, philosophy and art -
    Abuse of Notation is a thoughtful blog by a writer who weaves together mathematics, logic, philosophy, and programming into long-form essays and books, covering topics from category theory to Kant to functional programming. The site also features several self-authored books, including 'Category Theory Illustrated,' making it a surprisingly deep resource for readers who enjoy rigorous yet personal intellectual exploration.
  • 2026-07-07
    All You Ever Wanted to Know About Pascal's Triangle and more
    A detailed educational resource dedicated entirely to Pascal's Triangle, covering its construction, history, and the surprising number of patterns hidden within it. Visitors can explore topics ranging from the Fibonacci sequence and Sierpinski fractals to prime numbers and polygonal numbers, with downloadable programs to generate and visualize the triangle's patterns.
  • 2026-07-07
    CALCULUS.ORG
    Calculus.org is a comprehensive educational hub hosted by UC Davis, offering step-by-step calculus problems, Java applets, Maple and Mathematica animations, and sample exams for both students and instructors. The site covers differential, integral, and multivariable calculus with resources ranging from humorous beginner guides to actuarial review problems, making it a well-rounded reference for anyone tackling the subject.
  • 2026-07-07
    Category Theory | Summer Study Group 2015
    A collaborative study group blog documenting UCLA Extension's 2015 Category Theory course led by Professor Michael Miller, covering abstract algebra, functors, and related mathematical structures. Participants followed a structured syllabus across multiple chapters, sharing notes, resources, LaTeX diagrams, and meeting summaries over the summer term.
  • 2026-07-07
    Clifford A. Pickover's Home Page
    The personal homepage of prolific author and inventor Clifford A. Pickover, featuring links to his 50+ books spanning fractals, chaos, black holes, the fourth dimension, and the mathematics of reality. With 800 patents, a sprawling collection of puzzles, art, and cosmic questions, this site is a portal into the mind of one of science's most imaginative popularizers.
  • 2026-07-07
    Complex Analysis
    Created by Juan Carlos Ponce Campuzano, this interactive online textbook introduces complex analysis through visual applets built with GeoGebra, p5.js, and other JavaScript tools, making abstract mathematical concepts tangible and explorable. Covering topics from the Cauchy-Goursat Theorem to conformal mappings, it serves engineering and mathematics students with a beautifully designed, continually updated resource that includes Spanish and Italian translations.
  • 2026-07-07
    Construction by Compasses Alone
    David E. Joyce of Clark University presents a detailed mathematical exploration of compass-only geometric constructions, proving that a straightedge is unnecessary for any Euclidean construction. The site covers circle inversion, stereographic projection, inversive geometry, and involutory quandles, drawing on the historical work of Mohr and Mascheroni.
  • 2026-07-07
    Cool Math Links
    A curated collection of mathematics education links compiled at Andrews University, organized into sections for teachers, parents, and students across K-12 grade levels. The directory covers lesson plans, interactive activities, problem-solving resources, and NCTM-aligned curriculum materials from across the early web.
  • 2026-07-07
    Dale Mellorʼs Blog
    Dale Mellor is a scientific computer programmer, mathematician, and physicist who writes accessible math explainers like his 'Baby Steps for Adults' series alongside posts about science fiction, Star Trek, fine art, and daily life. The blog covers a genuinely eclectic range of intellectual interests, with mathematics and computing forming the clear backbone of the content.
  • 2026-07-07
    Dimensions Home
    Dimensions is a freely available two-hour mathematical film by Jos Leys, Étienne Ghys, and Aurélien Alvarez that guides viewers through nine chapters building up to the concept of the fourth dimension. Released under a Creative Commons license, it offers commentary and subtitles in over a dozen languages, making advanced mathematical visualization accessible to a global audience.
  • 2026-07-07
    dominiccook.xyz
    Dominic Cook's personal site collects his explorations in mathematics, number theory, measure theory, and speculative metaphysics alongside creative web projects like 88x31 webpins, glitch art, and calculators. The mix of rigorous mathematical writing and old-web aesthetics makes it a quirky, intellectually curious corner of the indie web.
  • 2026-07-07
    Earliest Known Uses of Some of the Words of Mathematics
    Jeff Miller's meticulously researched reference page tracks the earliest known uses of mathematical terminology, tracing when and where specific math words first appeared in historical texts. This is a unique etymological resource for mathematicians, historians, and anyone curious about the origins of the language of mathematics.
  • 2026-07-07
    Fibonacci Numbers, the Golden section and the Golden String
    Dr Ron Knott's comprehensive mathematics resource, hosted by Surrey University since 1996, covers Fibonacci numbers, the golden ratio, and their appearances in nature, art, geometry, architecture, and music. Packed with interactive calculators, puzzles, investigations, and dozens of linked pages exploring everything from Lucas sequences to phyllotaxis, this is one of the oldest and most thorough maths sites on the web.
  • 2026-07-07
    Gallery of Data Visualization
    Hosted at York University, the Gallery of Data Visualization is a reference collection showcasing classic and contemporary examples of statistical graphics and chart design. It serves as an educational resource for students and researchers interested in how data can be effectively communicated through visual means.
  • 2026-07-07
    Generating Gaussian Random Numbers, Taygeta Scientific Inc.
    Taygeta Scientific Inc. presents a technical reference on generating Gaussian pseudo-random numbers using the Box-Muller transformation, written by Dr. Everett (Skip) F. Carter Jr. The page includes code examples, a step-by-step Weibull distribution walkthrough, and an academic reference list covering stochastic modelling and Monte Carlo methods.
  • 2026-07-07
    Godel and Godel's Theorem
    Math: Kenny Felder offers a thorough and accessible explanation of Gödel's Incompleteness Theorem, drawing heavily on Hofstadter's 'Gödel, Escher, Bach' to walk readers through the mathematics and philosophy behind one of the most profound results in logic. Written in 1996, the piece explores formal axiomatic systems, Russell and Whitehead's Principia Mathematica, and the far-reaching implications of Gödel's work for mathematics, artificial intelligence, and the nature of mind.
  • 2026-07-07
    GoGeometry - Unleash the Power of Geometry | Interactive Lessons, Tutorials, and Problem-solving Resources
    GoGeometry, created by Antonio Gutierrez, offers over 1600 illustrated geometry problems alongside interactive lessons and tutorials suited for both students and teachers. The site blends mathematical rigor with cultural touches, weaving in references to Incan heritage, Machu Picchu, and the golden ratio to make geometry visually engaging and globally inspired.
  • 2026-07-07
    Idenified's Zone
    Iden's personal corner of the web highlights their love of mathematics, featuring a playful 'Web Pi' page and a collection of 88x31 buttons alongside a blog and micro-log. The site has a charming lo-fi aesthetic with CC0-licensed content and participates in the No AI Webring.
  • 2026-07-07
    Interactive Mathematics Miscellany and Puzzles
    Created by Alexander Bogomolny starting in 1996, Cut the Knot is a massive encyclopedic collection of interactive mathematics covering geometry, algebra, probability, puzzles, proofs, and much more, built over decades until his passing in 2018. With thousands of pages, interactive Java applets, Olympiad problems, and articles spanning all levels of math, it stands as one of the most beloved and comprehensive math resources ever built on the early web.
  • 2026-07-07
    John Baez's Stuff
    John Baez is a mathematical physicist and emeritus professor at UC Riverside whose sprawling personal site features decades of expository writing on math and physics, including his long-running column 'This Week's Finds in Mathematical Physics.' Visitors can explore course notes, research papers, talks on topics from category theory to the Standard Model, and accessible blog posts bridging cutting-edge science with public engagement.
  • 2026-07-07
    Jonathan Fraser
    Jonathan Fraser, Professor of Mathematics at the University of St Andrews, maintains this academic homepage showcasing his research in fractal geometry, dimension theory, and geometric measure theory. Visitors will find links to his publications, research papers, talks, course notes, and resources related to his book on Assouad Dimension and Fractal Geometry.
  • 2026-07-07
    Joy of Pi | Pi Links
    A comprehensive link directory dedicated entirely to pi, curated by David Blatner, author of 'The Joy of Pi,' covering everything from basic pi facts and digit downloads to pi music, pi history, and Pi Day celebrations. Visitors will find hundreds of categorized links spanning memorizing pi, calculating digits, pi mysteries, and even wacky pi fun, making it a go-to hub for pi enthusiasts of all levels.
  • 2026-07-07
    Julian Day Numbers
    Peter Meyer's detailed reference article explains the Julian Day Number system, covering its origins, astronomical vs. chronological uses, and various related date formats like Modified Julian Day Numbers and Lilian Day Numbers. The page includes conversion algorithms and links to calendar software tools, making it a thorough technical reference for astronomers, historians, and calendricists.
  • 2026-07-07
    Kenneth Falconer | Mathematics | St Andrews
    Kenneth Falconer is a Regius Professor of Mathematics at the University of St Andrews whose personal academic page covers his pioneering work in fractal geometry, geometric measure theory, and multifractal analysis. Visitors will find links to his books and preprints, fractal movie resources, maths poems, and even a note about his impressive record completing 36 LDWA hundred-mile walks.
  • 2026-07-07
    MacTutor Index - MacTutor History of Mathematics
    MacTutor is a vast free archive maintained by mathematicians Edmund Robertson and John O'Connor of the University of St Andrews, featuring biographies of over 3000 mathematicians and more than 2000 historical essays. A true labor of love recognized with the Hirst Prize of the London Mathematical Society, it includes specialized indexes covering female mathematicians, mathematical societies, historical curves, and even postage stamps honoring math figures.
  • 2026-07-07
    Math @ CowPi
    Math @ CowPi offers a curated collection of math tools and resources, including interactive GeoGebra sketches, a system-of-equations solver for up to five unknowns, and a full annotated text of Edwin A. Abbott's classic novel Flatland. Visitors will also find organized math links spanning algebra, geometry, trigonometry, and calculus, making it a handy reference for students and enthusiasts alike.
  • 2026-07-07
    Math Links
    A curated collection of external math links from MathIsFun, organized into math websites, fun puzzle sites, and schools, covering everything from algebra and geometry to game theory and Pi. Created by Rod Pierce, this page serves as a springboard to some of the web's best math resources for students, teachers, and curious minds alike.
  • 2026-07-07
    Math2.org
    Math2.org is a comprehensive math reference site offering organized tables, formulas, and identities covering everything from basic arithmetic to calculus, linear algebra, and Fourier transforms. Available in both English and Spanish, it also features a message board for math questions and links to other top math resources on the web.
  • 2026-07-07
    Mathematical Problems by David Hilbert
    Created by David E. Joyce of Clark University, this site presents the full text of David Hilbert's famous 1900 lecture outlining 23 unsolved mathematical problems that shaped 20th-century mathematics. Each problem links to its own dedicated page with references to key solutions and related works, making it an invaluable reference for anyone studying the history and foundations of mathematics.
  • 2026-07-07
    Mathematical Resources
    Mathematical Art, Graphics, Chaos and Fractals (Math Links by Bruno Kevius): Bruno Kevius has assembled an extensive link collection covering mathematical art, fractals, chaos theory, and geometry, featuring resources on M.C. Escher, polyhedra, cellular automata, and fractal software. With over 120 curated links spanning strange attractors, tessellations, origami, and geometric sculpture, this is a rich reference hub for anyone exploring the intersection of math and visual art.
  • 2026-07-07
    Mathematically Interesting Games -- The Tower of Hanoi
    Part of the University of Toronto Mathematics Network, this page explores the classic Tower of Hanoi puzzle through its legendary origins, an interactive playable version, and a deep dive into the mathematical patterns it reveals. Created by Philip Spencer, it connects the puzzle to concepts like Hamiltonian paths and higher-dimensional geometry, making it a genuinely enriching educational resource.
  • 2026-07-07
    Mathematics and Poetry - Home
    A research project exploring the intersection of mathematics and poetry through a historical timeline tracing connections between mathematicians and poets across the centuries. The site offers a curated timeline, sources, and resources for anyone curious about how these two disciplines have influenced each other.
  • 2026-07-07
    MathLinks
    Maintained by University of Connecticut math professor Sarah Glaz, this curated link collection gathers hundreds of resources covering math humor, mathematical poetry, math in film and theater, interactive geometry, famous problems, and career guidance. It serves as a rich undergraduate reference bridging serious mathematics with its cultural and creative dimensions.
  • 2026-07-07
    Matthew R. Watkins' home page
    Matthew R. Watkins is a mathematician and honorary researcher at Exeter University whose site centers on his celebrated 'Secrets of Creation' trilogy, making analytic number theory and prime numbers accessible to general audiences. The site also features a number theory and physics archive, prime number resources for beginners, and links to his eclectic range of interests including parapsychology, the I Ching, and psychogeography.
  • 2026-07-07
    National Curve Bank - A MATH Archive
    The National Curve Bank is a mathematical archive dedicated to cataloging and exploring curves, offering detailed information on their properties, equations, and historical significance. A sister site to the Witch of Agnesi page, this project serves as an educational reference for students, educators, and math enthusiasts interested in the geometry of curves.
  • 2026-07-07
    nLab
    The nLab is a collaborative wiki covering advanced mathematics, physics, and philosophy with a strong emphasis on category theory, homotopy theory, topos theory, and their connections to theoretical physics. It serves as an encyclopedic reference for researchers and students working at the intersection of higher mathematics and mathematical physics, offering thousands of deeply interlinked articles.
  • 2026-07-07
    nsml.org
    The North Suburban Math League (NSML) organizes competitive math meets for Chicago-area high schools, with five competitions held throughout the school year. The site provides contest archives, meet schedules, written and oral topic lists, coach resources, and a history of NSML alumni who have earned medals at the International Mathematical Olympiad.
  • 2026-07-07
    Parker Adey
    Parker Adey is a math lecturer at the University of Toronto Scarborough who shares formal notes, informal blog posts, reading recommendations, and teaching materials spanning topology, linear algebra, and beyond. The site doubles as an academic hub with a CV, publications list, office webcam, and a decade of evolution captured in the Wayback Machine.
  • 2026-07-07
    Pi Land
    Pi Land is Eve Andersson's comprehensive tribute to the mathematical constant pi, featuring trivia games, a memory trainer, digit search tools, frequency analysis, and multiple calculation methods including Gregory-Leibniz and Monte Carlo. The site blends nerdy exploration with aesthetic touches like poetry, photos, and art, making it a delightful destination for math enthusiasts of all levels.
  • 2026-07-07
    Pi Section
    A page by a student or researcher at Brock University presenting the first 10,000 decimal digits of pi, calculated using Machin's formula on a Silicon Graphics MIPS R4400 workstation. It offers a concise glimpse into early 1990s academic computing power applied to a classic mathematical challenge.
  • 2026-07-07
    PlanetMath.org
    PlanetMath.org is a collaboratively built mathematics encyclopedia where community members write and review entries covering a vast range of mathematical topics, all rendered in LaTeX. Hosted by the University of Waterloo and operated as a nonprofit, it offers both a subject index and alphabetical index, making it a serious reference hub for students, educators, and math enthusiasts.
  • 2026-07-07
    Probability Inference for Propositional Logic • Pinference
    Pinference is an R package by PierGianLuca Porta Mana that implements probability inference for propositional logic, calculating lower and upper probability bounds for logical expressions using Hailperin's procedure. The documentation site covers the theoretical foundations connecting probability calculus to sequent calculus, with worked examples and an API reference for the inferP() function.
  • 2026-07-07
    Quilt Geometry
    Created by Steven H. Cullinane, this page explores the mathematical geometry underlying quilt block design, connecting symmetry theory to traditional patchwork patterns. It organizes curated resources across three difficulty levels, from elementary classroom guides to advanced topics like block designs in art and mathematics.
  • 2026-07-07
    Rice Virtual Lab in Statistics (RVLS)
    The Rice Virtual Lab in Statistics (RVLS), created by David Lane at Rice University, offers a comprehensive suite of free web-based tools for learning and teaching statistics, including an interactive online textbook, Java simulations, real-world case studies, and an analysis lab. Supported by the National Science Foundation and recognized by multiple educational organizations, it covers topics from basic descriptive statistics to ANOVA and regression.
  • 2026-07-07
    Sam Loyd's Cyclopedia of Puzzles
    Ed Pegg Jr's digitized archive of Sam Loyd's 1914 'Cyclopedia of 5000 Puzzles, Tricks, and Conundrums' presents the classic puzzle book as a complete set of scanned page images freely available for download. This rare public-domain release preserves one of the most celebrated puzzle collections in mathematical history, making it an invaluable resource for recreational mathematics enthusiasts.
  • 2026-07-07
    SANGAKU
    Created by Hiroshi Kotera, this site documents Sangaku, the beautiful geometric theorems that Japanese scholars of all social classes inscribed on wooden tablets and dedicated to shrines and temples during the Edo period. It offers images of surviving Sangaku tablets and serves as a rare English-language window into this uniquely Japanese mathematical tradition dating back to 1996.
  • 2026-07-07
    Shtetl-Optimized
    Shtetl-Optimized is the long-running blog of Scott Aaronson, a theoretical computer scientist and quantum computing researcher, where he dives deep into complexity theory, quantum computing misconceptions, AI, and education policy. Known for its intellectual rigor and wit, it attracts readers from academia and beyond who enjoy substantive takes on math, physics, and the occasional culture-war skirmish in gifted education.
  • 2026-07-07
    Slice of Pi, Anyone? - About Pi Day and the Transcendental Number Pi
    John Shepler's engaging article celebrates Pi Day and explores the fascinating history of the transcendental number pi, from ancient scholars to modern supercomputers crunching billions of decimal places. Packed with fun facts, literary references, and links to birthday calculators and playlists, it makes mathematics genuinely entertaining for casual readers and math enthusiasts alike.
  • 2026-07-07
    Sprott's Fractal Gallery
    Julien C. Sprott's Fractal Gallery is a sprawling collection of computer-generated fractal artwork, featuring a daily auto-updated fractal derived from strange attractor algorithms described in his book 'Strange Attractors: Creating Patterns in Chaos'. Visitors can browse thousands of downloadable images spanning Julia sets, Mandelbrot sets, 3D anaglyphs, tilings, and animations, plus a Java applet that generates new fractals every five seconds.
  • 2026-07-07
    The Chaos Hypertextbook
    The Chaos Hypertextbook is a deep educational resource covering chaos theory, fractals, strange attractors, and fractal dimension with clear explanations aimed at making complex mathematics accessible to a broad audience. Organized into chapters covering iteration, bifurcation, Julia sets, Mandelbrot sets, and nonlinear dynamics, it reads like a beautifully structured online textbook that would captivate anyone curious about the mathematics underlying unpredictable systems.
  • 2026-07-07
    The Geometry Center Welcome Page
    The Geometry Center was a University of Minnesota research and education hub dedicated to mathematics, geometry, and visualization tools, now archived after its closure. Visitors can explore interactive Java applications, 3D geometry software like Geomview and JGV, multimedia math documents, downloadable software, and video productions covering topics from solar system models to symmetry exploration.
  • 2026-07-07
    The KnotPlot Site
    Created by Robert G. Scharein, the KnotPlot Site is a visually stunning exploration of mathematical knot theory, featuring hundreds of images and animations generated by the KnotPlot software for Windows, macOS, and Linux. Visitors can browse galleries of torus knots, Celtic knots, hyperbolic knots, Brunnian links, and fractal structures, as well as download the KnotPlot program itself to visualize and manipulate knots in three and four dimensions.
  • 2026-07-07
    The On-Line Encyclopedia of Integer Sequences (OEIS)
    The OEIS is a massive searchable database of over 393,000 integer sequences, maintained by the OEIS Foundation and originally created by mathematician Neil Sloane. Researchers, students, and math enthusiasts can look up sequences by entering numbers to identify patterns, explore combinatorics, and discover connections across mathematical disciplines.
  • 2026-07-07
    Welcome to Mathematrix
    Mathematrix, created by Lee Stemkoski at Adelphi University, explores the playful and lesser-known side of mathematics through topics like polyominoes, Rubik's Cube, fractals, Conway's Game of Life, and higher dimensions. Accessible to curious minds at any level, the site blends mathematical art, humor, poetry, and hands-on puzzles to make recreational math genuinely entertaining.
  • 2026-07-07
    Welcome! - The Mathematics Genealogy Project
    The Mathematics Genealogy Project is a massive academic database tracking the doctoral advisor lineages of mathematicians worldwide, with over 337,000 records linking students to their advisors across generations. Hosted by NDSU in association with the American Mathematical Society, it lets you trace the intellectual ancestry of virtually any mathematician back through history.
  • 2026-07-07
    Women Mathematicians, Sponsored by Agnes Scott College
    Hosted by Agnes Scott College, this site offers an extensive collection of biographical essays on women mathematicians throughout history, organized alphabetically, chronologically, and even by birthplace with an interactive Google Map. It also tracks prizes, firsts, and current achievements, making it a rich reference for anyone interested in the history of women in mathematics.
  • 2026-07-07
    “The Lost Art of Logarithms” by Charles Petzold
    Charles Petzold's web-book-in-progress explores the history, utility, and mechanics of logarithms, from their origins in 400-year-old mathematical tables to slide rules and spherical trigonometry. With over 30 chapter-length pages covering topics like the Book of Vlacq, log-log scales, and John Napier's life, this is a rich and deeply researched labor of love for math history enthusiasts.
  • 2026-07-07
    tilde.town
    Joe's tilde.town personal page centers on affirmations of self-love, spiritual wellness, and positive manifestation, written in an introspective and meditative style. Short but sincere, it reflects a philosophy of gratitude and personal growth shared with visitors of the small-web community.
  • 2026-07-07
    (=^‥^=)
    A raw and personal FC2 blog by 'catgirlvomit,' a self-described 'sad girl on the net' documenting her struggles with poverty, stress, college life, and emotional hardship. The site's dominant tone is introspective and vulnerable, with most posts filed under 'negative' and touching on mental health crises, therapy, and daily survival.
  • 2026-07-07
    A Blue in a Sea of Reds
    Built by an autistic creator, this colorful personal site offers an 'autistic perspective on life' through essays, art, GIF collections, trivia, and pop culture commentary organized across a whimsical 'elevator directory' of floors. From WWE recaps to video game print media and survey-style opinion polls, the site is packed with eclectic handcrafted content centered on neurodivergent experience.
  • 2026-07-07
    A Year of HYPERLIVING
    A Year of HYPERLIVING is a year-long personal challenge blog where the author set weekly goals to rebuild self-understanding, form better habits, and figure out their future. The project spans 23 weeks of documented activities covering biking, writing, sleep, struggles, and self-improvement experiments.
  • 2026-07-07
    Autistic As Fxxk
    Rachel Tan's unapologetically Autistic blog challenges neuronormativity with a punk attitude, offering personal reflections on forging your own path outside neurotypical expectations. Based in Singapore, Rachel writes for Autistic punks, rebels, and misfits who refuse to mask or conform.
  • 2026-07-07
    cliophate.wtf
    Cliophate.wtf is a thoughtful personal blog where the author documents experiments in mindful technology use, including a multi-week project to reduce smartphone screen time and break habits of reflexive phone-checking. The writing is reflective and self-aware, exploring the psychology of digital distraction with references to other writers and a community of like-minded minimalists.
  • 2026-07-07
    Codependents.org Index
    Codependents.org serves as an index hub for Co-Dependents Anonymous (CoDA) resources, including email lists, audio recovery recordings, and organizational history. It offers a centralized gateway to 12-step recovery materials for people working through codependency issues.
  • 2026-07-07
    Crayon Hydra
    Crayon Hydra is the personal blog of a system living with DID (Dissociative Identity Disorder) and vaginismus, sharing their lived experiences to raise awareness and combat stigma around these conditions. Written with honesty and care, the site offers insight into coping strategies, therapy experiences, and the day-to-day realities of plural living.
  • 2026-07-07
    diet coke ONLY
    Created by the person behind 'Diet Coke or Choke', this personal site blends chronic illness storytelling with curated recommendations for movies, games, books, and links to other indie web spaces. The creator uses the site as a form of self-expression and a love letter to the old, human-centered internet, making it a warm and eclectic corner of the web.
  • 2026-07-07
    dykefag.com
    A vibrant personal homepage by dykefag featuring trans and safer sex resources, DIY HRT guides, and links to LGBTQ+ support organizations. The site also includes music embeds, a theme switcher, and a lively collection of pixel art buttons reflecting queer internet culture.
  • 2026-07-07
    EasyPeasy
    EasyPeasy is a free online book adapted from Allen Carr's method, rewritten to help people quit pornography without willpower or feelings of deprivation. Structured as a step-by-step guide with chapters covering addiction psychology, brainwashing, withdrawal, and relapse prevention, it offers a compassionate and practical framework for breaking the habit.
  • 2026-07-07
    emotional.codes
    Collected by wesleyac, emotional.codes is a small but thoughtful toolkit of interactive resources for navigating emotions and interpersonal relationships, including feelings check-ins, vulnerability questions, and a guide to defining relationships. It draws on frameworks like Nonviolent Communication and the Feelings Wheel, making emotional literacy more approachable and practical.
  • 2026-07-07
    Free Mental Health Resources
    A carefully curated directory of free and substantially free mental health resources, filterable by platform, type, and symptom category including anxiety, mood disorders, trauma, and suicidality. The site brings together apps, workbooks, online therapy tools, and social support communities to help people improve their mental health without the barrier of cost.
  • 2026-07-07
    Hudson's FTM Resource Guide
    Hudson's FTM Resource Guide is a comprehensive reference site created for female-to-male transgender men, covering everything from testosterone therapy and surgery options to grooming, clothing, and bathroom tips. Viewed over 20 million times across 180 countries since 2004, this long-running guide is one of the most thorough FTM transition resources on the early web.
  • 2026-07-07
    into the sky
    A personal Neocities site by Jasper Schill, featuring a self-described self-indulgent collection of pages built on a chromebook with a heavy blue aesthetic and lots of gifs. The site openly references the creator's mental health journey, with sensitive content appropriately marked with warnings for visitors.
  • 2026-07-07
    just jennie
    Jennie's personal microblog captures candid slices of her life, including a surprise ADHD diagnosis referral, burnout, and a nostalgic mission to revive old-school block blinkies. The site blends personal reflection with retro web aesthetics, making it a charming and honest corner of the modern indie web.
  • 2026-07-07
    Lost deep, deep in the woods
    A moody, atmospheric personal site hosted on Neocities where the owner explores their inner world without censorship, including discussions of depression and intrusive thoughts. The gothic woodland aesthetic and content warnings signal a deeply personal space built around mental health experiences.
  • 2026-07-07
    Matt's Big Fat Arse - A fatty's journey to better mental & physical health
    Matt's Big Fat Arse is a candid personal health blog where Matt documents his ongoing journey managing chronic pain, fatigue, mental health, and weight. The site tracks pain levels, stiffness, and mood over time with dedicated stats pages, making it a remarkably transparent and detailed account of living with chronic illness.
  • 2026-07-07
    mental health carrd
    Created by @giowrs, this interactive mental health resource guides visitors through their emotional state with branching prompts and connects them to crisis hotlines, breathing exercises, and curated support links. Built with care and clear safety warnings, it covers depression, anxiety, stress, and suicidal ideation while reminding users that the creator is not a medical professional.
  • 2026-07-07
    moftasa.net
    Moftasa's long-running personal blog by Mostafa Hussein Omar covers psychiatry resources, mental health for professionals, cycling events, and political commentary, with no ads or AI content. The site features curated podcast recommendations for mental health practitioners, personal updates about life in Egypt, and posts in both English and Arabic spanning two decades.
  • 2026-07-07
    Personality Test Site
    SimilarMinds.com hosts a large archive of 50+ personality tests covering systems like MOTIVES, Jung/Myers-Briggs typology, Enneagram, personality disorders, and career assessment. The site also features research tools including a Geographic Personality Explorer and studies linking personality types to happiness, health, and political orientation.
  • 2026-07-07
    rem's planet
    Rem's Planet is the creative corner of 'rem' (they/he), a neocities site centered on personal diary entries about mental health alongside illustrations and webshrines. The site has a warm, introspective tone with sections on typology, cell biology, rhythm games, and ARGs, making it a thoughtful and eclectic personal space.
  • 2026-07-07
    Suicide Hotlines - Suicide.org! Suicide Hotlines - Suicide.org! Suicide Hotlines - Suicide.org!
    Suicide.org is a comprehensive nonprofit resource dedicated to suicide prevention, offering international and U.S. hotline listings alongside articles covering warning signs, causes, statistics, and guidance for helping those in crisis. The site covers a wide range of related topics including teen suicide, bullying, PTSD, and survivor support, making it one of the more thorough reference hubs of its era for mental health crisis information.
  • 2026-07-07
    Take a personality test - Open Source Psychometrics Project
    The Open-Source Psychometrics Project offers a large collection of free, interactive personality tests ranging from rigorous academic instruments like the Big Five to quirky self-produced quizzes, all with detailed results and honest discussion of each test's validity. Visitors can explore everything from the Narcissistic Personality Inventory to a statistical character-matching quiz that compares your personality to over 2,000 fictional characters.
  • 2026-07-07
    Teen Mental Health Resource
    A dedicated resource hub for teens struggling with mental health challenges, offering curated links to crisis hotlines, therapy services, and supportive websites. The site also includes statistics about teen depression and suicide to raise awareness, making it a practical starting point for young people and their support networks.
  • 2026-07-07
    welcome to tcs!
    A personal site named 'Three Cheers for Success' that hints at mental health topics alongside spoiler-marked content, suggesting a mix of fandom and personal reflection. The entry page warns visitors about flashing images and light mental health themes, giving the site a thoughtful, self-aware tone before you even step inside.
  • 2026-07-07
    y2kinsomniac
    Y2kinsomniac's personal site opens with a content warning splash page flagging discussions of mental and physical health, suicidal ideation, self-harm, and medical topics. The high-contrast, bright-color aesthetic sets the tone for what promises to be an honest and personal exploration of health struggles.
  • 2026-07-07
    You feel like shit.
    Created by jace_harr, this interactive self-care flowchart guides people through a structured routine covering basic needs like food, water, medication, sleep, and movement. Designed specifically for those with executive dysfunction or difficulty reading internal signals, it breaks self-care into tiny, low-judgment decisions to make the process as accessible as possible.
  • 2026-07-07
    your ace.
    Kirifuda's personal Neocities page leads with prominent content warnings covering mental health, disability, gender identity, and abuse, signaling a space centered on candid discussion of these sensitive topics. The site participates in webrings and features old-web aesthetic stamps alongside accessibility-conscious design choices like eyestrain warnings.

Have a link suggestion? Send it to pablomurad@pm.me.