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.
2026-07-07 Silverkush.de - Personal Website Silverkush.de is a personal site with a strong anti-corporate, pro-open-web message, championing Linux, self-hosting, and the decentralized indie web. The site features a passionate manifesto against Big Tech, links to self-hosted projects, and classic old-web aesthetics including a guestbook, visitor counter, and construction GIFs.
2026-07-07 site@adabit.org ~/home Ada's personal homepage presents a terminal-aesthetic personal site for a self-described professional nerd, sysadmin, and cosplayer who serves as FRC robotics team captain. The site links out to her art, blog, and services pages, and participates in the CSS JOY Webring.
2026-07-07 Slatians hideout on the Web | slatecave.net Slatian's personal site blends a blog, notebook, and software showcase around a deep passion for Linux, programming, and the semantic web. Visitors will find tutorials on SSH, SQLite, Forgejo runners, and search engine architecture, all written by a self-described fluffy dragon who uses Void, Artix, and Alpine Linux.
2026-07-07 Sorzitos Lair - Homebase Sorzito's personal tech stronghold focuses on Linux shell scripting, minimalist software setups, and daily configs, with projects like a shellscript AUR helper and a terminal lyrics fetcher. The site reflects a suckless/Artix Linux philosophy with links to useful web tools and a curated set of personal projects.
2026-07-07 soucy.cc hs0ucy runs a small self-hosted internet server out of a basement on an HP Mini 110, powered by OpenBSD 7.8 i386. The landing page is a minimalist ASCII splash screen linking to a personal Hugo site and a wiki, making it a charming example of hobbyist self-hosting culture.
2026-07-07 Starlink - Community Help Wiki A community-maintained Ubuntu wiki page providing step-by-step installation instructions for Starlink, a suite of astronomical research and analysis tools. It covers downloading, unpacking, and configuring the software on Linux, making it a useful reference for astronomers and scientists running Ubuntu.
2026-07-07 STFN STFN is a personal tech blog by a Python developer and homelabber who writes about self-hosting, Linux containers, networking, and home server builds. Posts range from setting up Proxmox on a Lenovo Tiny PC to building a solar-powered web server, making it a rich resource for hands-on homelab enthusiasts.
2026-07-07 tasia's website Tasia's personal site blends technical writing about NixOS, self-hosting, and privacy with personal reflections from a queer trans therian fox who is part of a plural system. Visitors will find astrophotography posts, a trainspotting entry, a geek code block, furry code, and a collection of friend badges that give the site a charming old-web personality.
2026-07-07 The .Files The.Files is a technical blog by dgy on tilde.club covering Linux tooling, static site generation, and terminal-based workflows including Hugo, Drone CI, Gitea, BSPWM, and Vim. Posts are concise and practical, walking through real configuration challenges like multimonitor setups and integrating FZF as a Vim package.
2026-07-07 The Arcade Artic, a 24-year-old Italian tech enthusiast, has built this personal corner of the web to share his deep interests in Linux, self-hosting, privacy, open-source software, electronics, and hacking. The site has a cozy old-web aesthetic complete with pixel art backgrounds, a guestbook, webrings, and a changelog that signals active upkeep.
2026-07-07 The Crypt V2 The Crypt is a personal Neocities page with a strong focus on Linux, privacy advocacy, and the cyberpunk philosophy, featuring guides on why privacy matters, FOSS alternatives, and critiques of platforms like Facebook. The site also links out to anime, manga, and gaming interests, but its most substantive original content centers on open-source software and digital freedom.
2026-07-07 The Dispatcher The personal tilde.club page of Gl0bZ, who serves as 'The Dispatcher' for the tilde.club community, managing a 6,000+ user waiting list and directing newcomers to available tildeboxes. The page also introduces Alice, a collaborative creative project where users help a character survive by editing their webpages on the shared Unix system.
2026-07-07 The web site of cloudAndroid CloudAndroid's personal corner of the web, styled as a cozy 'nimbus city' hangout, covers Linux, video games, robots, sci-fi, and music. Still under construction, it has a friendly retro-web vibe with participation in the No AI Webring.
2026-07-07 thedaemon's space Thedaemon's personal space is a minimalist site built around 9front and FreeBSD, featuring artwork scribbles, a mysterious 'void' section, articles, and a log. The site proudly runs on its own 9front server and participates in the XXIIVV and Hacker webrings, giving it a strong hacker-culture aesthetic.
2026-07-07 Théo Bori Théo Bori's personal site showcases his passion for FOSS, NixOS, and privacy-respecting services, including his maintenance of teedata.net and contributions to nixpkgs. Visitors can explore his blog posts, public zettelkasten, and open source projects, with the site even accessible via Gopher and Tor.
2026-07-07 tilde.club wiki The tilde.club wiki is a community-maintained knowledge base for users of the tilde.club shared Unix server, covering everything from SSH login and Emacs editing to CGI scripting and Gopher setup. It offers a nostalgic yet practical slice of the tildeverse, with tutorials aimed at beginners and guides for the retro-inspired command-line community.
2026-07-07 tilde.club wiki – faq The official FAQ for tilde.club, a shared Unix server community where members host personal web pages and collaborate in a retro internet environment. It covers how to join, community etiquette, terminal tips including byobu key fixes for PuTTY users, and links to primers for getting started on the system.
2026-07-07 tilde.guru — FreeBSD Pubnix tilde.guru is a FreeBSD-based public access Unix server (pubnix) operated by sysop sarmonsiill, offering free shell accounts to 184 users as part of the tildeverse community. The site features a bulletin board with system news, a user directory, and connections to tildeverse services like IRC, a Mastodon instance, and a Gitea forge.
2026-07-07 tilde.institute Public-access OpenBSD system: Tilde.institute is a public-access multi-user UNIX system running OpenBSD, offering shell accounts, gopher space, web hosting, IRC, and games to its community of users. It is part of the broader "tilde" movement of shared public Unix servers, making it a welcoming entry point for anyone wanting to explore OpenBSD and the social dynamics of a collaborative Unix environment.
2026-07-07 tilde.pink tilde.pink is a tilde community server accessible exclusively via Gopher and Gemini protocols, making it a rare holdout of the old-school internet philosophy. Visitors are redirected away from the web entirely, encouraged to explore using alternative, lightweight protocols that predate or sidestep the modern HTTP web.
2026-07-07 tilde.team tilde.team is a shared Unix system created by ~ben as a free, inclusive digital community for socializing, learning, and experimenting with the social medium of Unix, inspired by Paul Ford's tilde.club. With over 700 active users and services including Mastodon, Gitea, IRC, Gemini, Gopher, and a webring, it is a founding member of the tildeverse.org collaborative network of tilde servers.
2026-07-07 tilde.town Tilde.town is a shared Linux server community of around 3000 users who collaborate to make art, socialize, and learn together, founded in 2014 by ~vilmibm. Visitors can explore user-made projects like interactive blackout art, mosaic tetris, and HTML graffiti, or apply to join this quirky digital neighborhood.
2026-07-07 tildeverse - Tildeverse Wiki The official Tildeverse Wiki documents the history and community of the tildeverse, a loose association of public Unix shell servers inspired by tilde.club. Visitors can learn about pubnixes, how to join member tilde communities, and explore the origins of the modern tilde culture movement.
2026-07-07 Tildeverse Directory A curated link directory of tildeverse communities, tools, and projects, collected from tildeverse.org by the user extratone on tilde.town. It spans member servers, IRC networks, git repositories, mailing lists, a radio station, and even a Minecraft server, offering a thorough map of the shared Unix-based public-access tilde community.
2026-07-07 tildeverse | members The Tildeverse members directory catalogs the full collection of public-access Unix and tilde communities, listing each server's sysadmin, operating system, IRC channel, and founding date. It's a fascinating window into the modern tilde movement, where people share Unix shells to build web pages, write software, and collaborate in a retro internet spirit.
2026-07-07 Ty3r0X's Lair Ty3r0X's Lair is the personal corner of a tech-savvy individual who goes by Ty3r0X, featuring badges and propaganda for Linux, Firefox, Neovim, and homebrew software culture. The site oozes old-web hacker aesthetics with GPG key links, anti-Chrome sentiment, and a collection of friend/affiliate buttons that signals a deeply embedded open-source community presence.
2026-07-07 Unix Toolbox Unix Toolbox is a comprehensive reference guide by Colin Barschel covering hundreds of Unix, Linux, and BSD commands for sysadmins and advanced users. With concise, practical coverage of topics like SSH tunnels, VPNs, SSL certificates, rsync, disk management, and more, it serves as an indispensable compact handbook for IT professionals.
2026-07-07 Venam's Blog — Patrick Louis (Lebanon) Patrick Louis (venam) from Lebanon writes deeply researched technical articles about Unix and Linux internals, alongside philosophy, psychology, and cultural commentary. The blog stands out for its rigorous, first-principles approach to demystifying complex systems like input stacks, CPU scheduling, and access control on Unix-like operating systems.
2026-07-07 Vin-dit Vin-dit is jholland's personal blog where posts frequently touch on OpenBSD, Unix permissions, Linux security models, and self-hosting adventures with Caddy and Apache. The site doubles as a self-hosted experiment, running simultaneously from a home server and a commercial host, giving it a distinctly hands-on sysadmin flavor alongside occasional music videos and personal reflections.
2026-07-07 Volution Notes Volution Notes is a technical blog by a small IT company owner covering Linux internals, cryptography, containerization, security, and cloud infrastructure with a thoughtful, hands-on approach. Posts range from experiments with Linux policy-based routing and UEFI booting to musings on password security, binary encoding, and the open web, making it a rich resource for systems-minded readers.
2026-07-07 Webrings InnocentZero's personal hub showcases membership in several tech-focused webrings including the nixRing, Fediring, Hacker's webring, and Retronaut ring. The site leans into a hacker and open-source identity, making it a small but telling snapshot of the indie web community centered around Unix culture and decentralized tech.
2026-07-07 Welcome To Distro.Tube Derek Taylor (DT) runs DistroTube, a hub for GNU/Linux enthusiasts featuring videos, articles, and tutorials about free and open source software. Built entirely in Emacs using Org Mode, the site reflects DT's deep commitment to the Linux philosophy and serves as the official home of his popular YouTube and Odysee video channel.
2026-07-07 Welcome to Linux From Scratch! Linux From Scratch (LFS) is a legendary project founded by Gerard Beekmans that provides detailed step-by-step instructions for building a complete Linux system entirely from source code. The site hosts a family of related books and subprojects covering everything from base installation to gaming support, multilib builds, and automated tooling, making it an essential reference for anyone wanting to deeply understand how Linux works.
2026-07-07 welcome to my ~ page A tilde.green shell account homepage that has barely been customized beyond the default placeholder text, inviting visitors to SSH in and edit the index file. It references a couple of linked user pages and little else, making it a quintessential bare-bones tilde community page.
2026-07-07 Welcome to Sidetracked | Sidetracked Sidetracked is a personal blog by AlignedTrack432 featuring long-form, opinionated essays on topics like Linux desktop usability, FOSS philosophy, and the occasional video game narrative critique. The writing is sharp and self-aware, with pieces clocking in at 8-13 minutes of reading time and tackling subjects like distro-hopping fatigue, open-source governance, and the cultural arrogance embedded in tech infrastructure.
2026-07-07 welcome to tilde.town's wiki! The tilde.town wiki is a collaborative, community-edited documentation hub for the tilde.town shared Linux server, covering server-specific guides, art projects, fiction, and how-to content contributed by its users. It runs on a custom git-based wiki system and embodies the cooperative, open spirit of the tilde community movement.
2026-07-07 Welcome to Willard's World. Drinks are in the back. Willard's personal homepage showcases a self-described DevOps goblin and computer engineer with 10+ years of Linux and homelabbing experience, covering topics like OpenGL, computer vision, embedded hacking, and Kubernetes. The site has a playful, retro-web personality with humorous fake download links, terminal commands for oh-my-zsh and AUR helpers, and links to various projects at RIT.
2026-07-07 Welcome! - paritybit.ca Jake Bauer (jbauer) runs this thoughtful personal site and blog focused on Linux, open source software, self-hosting, and the philosophy of simple, sustainable computing. Highlights include opinionated posts on IRC, email, free software, and old tech, plus a digital garden wiki, projects, and co-hosting the Linux Lads Podcast.
2026-07-07 welcome! | nonk's website Nonk's personal developer site highlights a passion for low-level programming, GNU/Linux, and game development using raylib and SDL3. The site features links to projects, a blog, guestbook, and a lively collection of webrings and friend links typical of the indie web scene.
2026-07-07 Wilbur's Site Wilbur's personal site showcases a systems administrator's deep passion for Linux, networking, archiving, and electronics, with projects ranging from ISO archives to content delivery mirroring. A hub for genuinely eclectic tech projects, it also touches on BGP, cryptotechnology, and software engineering with a refreshingly self-aware tone.
2026-07-07 witcher's blog Witcher's blog is a tech-focused personal blog covering self-hosting, Linux setups, password managers, and open-source tools with hands-on writeups. Posts range from building a custom CRKBD keyboard to setting up mail sync and static site generation, making it a solid resource for the DIY sysadmin crowd.
2026-07-07 WKYKYKYKYKYK WKYK is a cozy personal corner of the web run by a self-described internet person who writes about switching to Linux Mint, networking concepts like UDP checksums, and music discoveries. The site blends casual blog-style updates with tech musings and hints at a growing repository of music content, making it a charming snapshot of a curious, technically-minded netizen.
2026-07-07 Won't Work! Kopper's personal corner of the web, packed with opinionated tech writing on topics like Linux, software evangelism, and client-to-server protocol quirks. The site has a distinctly hacker-hobbyist personality, linking out to Codeberg and ActivityPub while sporting cheeky web buttons and a refreshingly blunt tone.
2026-07-07 www.bentasker.co.uk Ben Tasker's personal site is a deep technical resource maintained by an IT manager and Linux specialist who documents his problem-solving adventures in software development and server administration. Visitors will find a regularly updated blog and documentation archive covering topics like e-reader setups, containerized services, and server security.
2026-07-07 zoechrome Zoechrome's personal corner of the web offers a mix of Linux tips, video game reviews, and original music hosted on SoundCloud. The site has a charming retro aesthetic complete with a downloadable button, making it a cozy hub for a creator with eclectic tech and gaming interests.
2026-07-07 ~bradley Bradley's tilde.club corner features a thoughtful post about customizing the Bash prompt in Linux, exploring both the technical how-to and the deeper human impulse to personalize one's environment. The writing is warm and reflective, blending command-line culture with genuine self-expression.
2026-07-07 ~ejw Edwin Wenink's tilde.club page serves as a practical reference for Unix command-line workflows, covering topics like generating static sites with pandoc, opening posts in Vim, configuring Weechat, and using finger for user info. A student of philosophy and AI, Edwin shares his hands-on tildeverse experiments alongside links to other tilde community members and resources.
2026-07-07 ~gbmor The personal homepage of gbmor, a software developer and Linux/BSD enthusiast who runs tilde.institute, a public-access OpenBSD system for exploration and socializing. The site showcases numerous open-source software projects including a twtxt registry server, a Gemini protocol server, and community tools built for public-access UNIX environments.
2026-07-07 ~green Tilde.green is a public-access Unix community server running Ubuntu, where members get personal web space, shell accounts, and access to shared services like forums, wikis, and weblogs. With over 270 registered users and a growing list of personal pages, it is part of the broader 'tildeverse' movement of collaborative shared hosting communities.
2026-07-07 ~imt @ remotes.club The personal tildespace of ~imt on remotes.club, where this sysadmin-minded tinkerer documents experiments with tilde communities, GnuPG page signing, uptime monitoring via UptimeRobot, and running club6.nl, the first IPv6-only Public Access UNIX system. Posts blend hands-on server administration with open-source tooling including Jekyll, Keybase, and JSON/JSON-P APIs.
2026-07-07 ~imt @ tilde.club A tilde.club personal blog by ~imt, focused on tinkering with public-access Unix systems, self-hosting, and internet infrastructure experiments. Notable projects include club6.nl, the first IPv6-only public access Unix system, and tilde.hol.es, an uptime monitoring dashboard for tildeverse servers.
2026-07-07 ~jmjl's page The personal corner of jmjl, an admin for the tilde.green shared Unix server community, where they document their work managing signups, debugging, and setting up new services. The page also shares a handful of technical finds including LD_PRELOAD utilities and HAProxy protocol support libraries for fellow tilde enthusiasts.
2026-07-07 ~lafe on tilde.club Lafe's tilde.club homepage covers their journey switching from Windows to Arch Linux, including guides on using the Pan Usenet reader and experimenting with twtxt and the smol web. The site has a refreshingly honest, work-in-progress feel with pages on Arch Linux setup, static site generators like Eleventy, and Gemini/Gopher exploration.
2026-07-07 ~nick is trying to keep up with all the cool stuff happening at Tilde.town Nick's personal page on tilde.town documents his adventures learning Linux, HTML, CSS, SSH tunnels, and command-line tools as part of the tilde.town shared-server community. A charming snapshot of the tilde movement era, it includes live widgets showing online users, random links to fellow tilde.town residents, and reflections on community life in IRC and shared Unix spaces.
2026-07-07 ~pemt silly website Paweł (pemt) hosts this minimal tilde.club page covering Lua scripting, Emacs adventures, and ASCII art alongside personal interests like yo-yoing, origami, and isopods. Part of the no-AI and CSS JOY webrings, it reflects the cozy, handcrafted ethos of the small web with a Gemini mirror for cleaner markup.
2026-07-07 ~yosh Yosh's personal page hosted on unix.dog features a classic old-web aesthetic complete with web badges, friend links, and sections covering gadgets, articles, and personal interests. The badge collection references Arch Linux, Rain World, Resonite, and various friends' sites, giving it a distinctly nerdy, community-connected feel.
2026-07-07 mycie.neocities.org Mycie's personal Neocities site centers on a growing blog and diary with over 20 entries, alongside fun personal touches like quizzes, a MASH character ranking, and a guestbook. The site has a warm, self-aware charm as the creator openly documents their journey from obsessing over web design aesthetics to finally focusing on generating real content.