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  • 2026-07-07
    Previous Poem of the Month Selections from The Fine-Arts Bluesband & Poetry Press
    The Fine-Arts Bluesband & Poetry Press has been publishing a monthly featured poem since 1995, creating an extraordinary archive of over three decades of original poetry. Each month brings a new selection with evocative imagery and haiku-like brevity, and the archive is navigable by year all the way back to the mid-nineties.
  • 2026-07-07
    RAIN'S WEBSITE
    Rain's cozy corner of the web features personal writing, poetry, and music alongside a self-deprecating invite to browse their thoughts and interests. The site has a Serial Experiments Lain-inspired aesthetic and offers a blog, poetry section, and links for visitors to explore.
  • 2026-07-07
    Robot Poetry Reading, a project by The Angelo Foundation
    Robot Poetry Reading is a creative project by The Angelo Foundation, blending technology and verse in an unconventional poetic format. The project, connected to artist Angelo Plessas, explores the intersection of robotics and poetry in a distinctly experimental way.
  • 2026-07-07
    Roll of Nickels
    Roll of Nickels is a long-running poetry blog active since 2006, written by a Canadian poet who shares original poems, reviews, interviews, quotes, and reflective essays on the craft of writing. The opening post alone, a moving meditation on reading poetry aloud to a dying husband, signals the depth and emotional intelligence that characterizes this site throughout.
  • 2026-07-07
    Science Fiction & Fantasy Poetry Association – The official website of the SFPA
    The Science Fiction & Fantasy Poetry Association (SFPA) is the official home of a registered US non-profit founded in 1978 to connect poets and readers passionate about speculative poetry. The site offers membership information, two published magazines, annual award listings including the prestigious Rhysling Award, poetry contests, market resources, and a bibliography of speculative poetry.
  • 2026-07-07
    Scrabble Tile Poem
    Mike Keith's ingenious constrained poem uses all 100 Scrabble tiles to construct each tercet, a remarkable feat of wordplay that bridges mathematical recreation and literary art. The poem pays homage to Georges Perec's structurally complex novel 'Life A User's Manual,' layering clever constraints within constraints in a visually striking tile-based presentation.
  • 2026-07-07
    Sebastian Malloy
    Sebastian Malloy's personal blog blends original writing, haiku, and art with candid personal reflection, anchored by a lifelong love of the typewriter. Recent posts range from playful haiku sequences to political anxiety pieces and literary musings on Popeye as a role model.
  • 2026-07-07
    Sixth Finch
    Sixth Finch is a quarterly online journal publishing poetry and visual art from a rotating roster of contemporary contributors. Each issue features work from multiple poets and artists, making it a rich destination for readers interested in literary and visual experimentation.
  • 2026-07-07
    the e-poets network
    The e-poets network is a pioneering online venue for spoken word and poetry, featuring the Book of Voices archive with audio recordings from emerging and well-known poets since 1999. Visitors can explore the Videotheque for experimental poetry film, the Incomplete History of Slam, and a collaborative archive with the Woman Made Gallery.
  • 2026-07-07
    The Internet Poetry Archive
    The Internet Poetry Archive is a curated online collection featuring works by celebrated poets including Seamus Heaney, Yusef Komunyakaa, Philip Levine, Czeslaw Milosz, and others, sponsored by the University of North Carolina Press and the North Carolina Arts Council. Created and edited by Paul Jones of UNC, it offers audio-encoded readings alongside poetic texts, making it a rich resource for both casual readers and serious students of contemporary poetry.
  • 2026-07-07
    The Longest Poem in the World
    The Longest Poem in the World is an automated project that aggregates rhyming tweets from Twitter in real time to form a continuously growing, ever-expanding poem. It's a fascinating intersection of social media and found poetry, generating an endless collaborative verse from the collective output of the internet.
  • 2026-07-07
    the POETRY kit
    The Poetry Kit is a comprehensive hub for poets worldwide, managed by Jim Bennett and founded by Ted Slade, offering listings of open mic events, competitions, magazines, and online poetry courses across dozens of countries. With an ISSN-registered newsletter, a bookshelf of recommended titles, calls for submissions, and an archive of over 600 poems from 21 countries, it serves as an essential resource for both emerging and established poets.
  • 2026-07-07
    The Poetry Project > Hub
    The Poetry Project is a legendary literary arts organization based at St. Mark's Church in New York City, dedicated to sustaining poetry through readings, workshops, publications, and fellowships. With offerings like the Dial-A-Poem USA service, the Emerge-Surface-Be Fellowship, the Lisa Brannan Prize, and an extensive archive of audio, video, and print materials, it stands as one of America's most enduring poetry institutions.
  • 2026-07-07
    the valley below
    The Valley Below is a lyrical microblog blending original poetry, fragments of Plato's Phaedrus in Greek and English translation, and dreamlike prose meditations. Intimate beach photography and spare, evocative verse make this a quietly beautiful corner of the web for readers drawn to philosophy, love, and the oceanic sublime.
  • 2026-07-07
    The web site of max2019
    A hauntingly minimalist site by max2019, built around cryptic, lyrical text fragments that evoke grief, memory, and a mysterious figure named Anita. The site's sparse structure and poetic prose give it the feel of a digital memorial or experimental literary piece.
  • 2026-07-07
    TheAntigonePoems - Home
    The Antigone Poems is the official site for a poetry collection by Marie Slaight, featuring art by Terrence Tasker, inspired by the ancient Sophocles tragedy. Described as 'surreal and wild... terrifyingly brilliant,' the book promises an expedition into brutal lyricism drawn from classical Greek drama.
  • 2026-07-07
    thisismybeautifuldomainonedayillbegonebutitwillremain.com
    This site presents a single poem by Lev Manovich, the renowned new media theorist, formatted as its own dedicated web domain. The poem's title is the domain name itself, making the URL and the artwork one unified piece of net poetry.
  • 2026-07-07
    TURKCE SIIR - TURKISH POETRY
    A comprehensive archive of Turkish poetry featuring an extensive list of poets, folk poetry, and translations into multiple languages including English, German, French, Italian, Spanish, and Dutch. Built and maintained by contributors from around the world, this multilingual resource celebrates Turkish literary tradition from Ottoman lyric poetry to contemporary verse.
  • 2026-07-07
    UniVerse
    A United Nations of Poetry: UniVerse is a nonprofit organization dedicated to celebrating international poetry by featuring a laureate poet from every nation in the world, including poets writing in endangered languages and those living in exile. Founded by the late Richard Fammeree, the site hosts an expanding anthology representing poets from over 61 nations, along with recorded live readings, free curricula, and multimedia features produced in partnership with Chicago Public Radio.
  • 2026-07-07
    Via Negativa – Purveyors of fine poetry since 2003.
    Via Negativa is Dave Bonta's long-running poetry blog, active since 2003, featuring original erasure poems derived from Samuel Pepys' diary alongside contributions from poet Luisa A. Igloria. The site is a rich archive of daily poetry practice, collaborative verse exchanges, and poetry in response to visual art and nature photography.
  • 2026-07-07
    Welcome to the Haiku Society of America Web Site
    The Haiku Society of America, founded in 1968, serves as the central hub for English-language haiku writing and appreciation, offering membership, contests, mentorship, and the Frogpond literary journal. Visitors can explore haiku bibliographies, HSA definitions, student competitions for grades 7-12, and archives of past issues dating back decades.
  • 2026-07-07
    WELCOME TO THE MIND FXXK
    Dead Boy Walking's personal space on Neocities serves as a dump for poetry and creative expression, with the webmaster noting a love for coding as an art form. The site draws heavy inspiration from Vocaloid artist Maretu and the song Brain Revolution Girl, giving it a chaotic, expressive old-web aesthetic.
  • 2026-07-07
    Welcome to Verse Daily!
    Verse Daily is a long-running web anthology that publishes a new poem every day, sourced from contemporary poetry collections and literary journals. With a full archive, weekly web features, and a submission process, it serves as an essential daily destination for poetry lovers seeking quality verse.
  • 2026-07-07
    what have we here?
    Clare's personal corner of the web offers poems, musings, and heartfelt writing that leans into dark themes like grief, death, and the macabre. Styled with the nostalgic aesthetic of the old web, it promises a moody, intimate space for readers who appreciate queer, leftist, and emotionally raw creative writing.
  • 2026-07-07
    ɑrbərtrɛri
    Arbourtrary is the creative home of a developer-poet who blends nature, mathematics, and verse into a richly layered personal site. Visitors can explore original poems, generative sketches, data-driven projects like NBA Recordigami, and a lifelong music chronology with personal blurbs for each beloved song.
  • 2026-07-07
    ava's blog
    Ava's personal blog focuses on data protection law, digital privacy, and tech criticism, with posts tackling topics like personal websites and the law, the illusion of human oversight in AI, and whether offline living has become a luxury. The site blends thoughtful legal commentary with personal reflections on health and small creative projects, making it a genuinely interesting read for anyone curious about the intersection of technology and civil liberties.
  • 2026-07-07
    Carry on and keep moving
    Caib.us is a politically opinionated personal blog written from a conservative perspective, featuring commentary on Republican politics, celebrity culture, and sharp jabs at liberal Los Angeles. Posts mix snarky takes on figures like Paris Hilton and Condoleezza Rice with unapologetic right-leaning social commentary.
  • 2026-07-07
    Dronestream
    Dronestream, built by Josh Begley, tracks every reported covert US drone strike in Pakistan, Yemen, and Somalia through a publicly accessible API, searchable database, and real-time Twitter feed. It aggregates human stories and investigative journalism from the Bureau of Investigative Journalism to document the human impact of remote warfare.
  • 2026-07-07
    End Day Light Saving Time
    Created by Sheila Danzig, this advocacy site makes the case for abolishing daylight saving time, arguing that the twice-yearly clock change causes economic harm, disrupts daily life, and fails to deliver promised energy savings. Visitors can read the history of DST, sign a petition to Congress, take a quiz, and find contact information for their elected representatives.
  • 2026-07-07
    Fuck off Google! - Let's kick Google and co. out of our Lives and Spaces!
    Fuck off Google! is a decentralized activist network campaigning against Google and Big Tech's data exploitation, tax evasion, and physical expansion into urban neighborhoods like Kreuzberg in Berlin. The site documents 'G-entrification,' mass surveillance, and censorship while promoting decentralized technologies and community resistance.
  • 2026-07-07
    Home - Adam Elkus
    Adam Elkus writes long-form analytical essays on political violence, strategy, technology, and contemporary events, drawing on a wide range of academic and cultural references. With 50 articles spanning topics from the January 6th insurrection to Silicon Valley solutionism, this is a substantive intellectual blog for readers who enjoy rigorous, interdisciplinary commentary.
  • 2026-07-07
    Idiomdrottning
    Sandra's prolific personal blog covers a wide range of topics with a strong lean toward political and environmental commentary, including sharp critiques of Swedish climate policy and tech regulation. Posts range from Swedish-language climate politics to English-language musings on AI, food, philosophy, and language, making it an eclectic but politically charged read.
  • 2026-07-07
    illegal solutions, today
    Illegal Solutions is a sharp, opinionated blog covering politics, technology, and culture with posts tackling topics like ICE enforcement, Silicon Valley labor exploitation, AI ethics, and the normalization of extremist rhetoric. The writing is candid and unapologetically direct, making it a compelling read for anyone frustrated with mainstream political discourse.
  • 2026-07-07
    Index
    TVRRIS EBVRNEA is a personal blog blending political commentary, conspiracy analysis, and spiritual reflections, with posts touching on topics like Jeffrey Epstein, the World Economic Forum, and Theravada Buddhist daily practices. The site is part of the Lainchan Webring community and carries a distinctly countercultural, introspective tone that will appeal to readers drawn to alternative perspectives.
  • 2026-07-07
    Infidel Notions
    Infidel Notions is a politically charged blog embracing contrarian viewpoints, conspiracy theories, and commentary on topics the author sees as suppressed or canceled by mainstream media and social platforms. Posts range from takes on presidential politics and free speech to cultural criticism, memes, and links to alternative media voices like Candace Owens and others.
  • 2026-07-07
    Leviathan Slayer
    Leviathan Slayer is a libertarian political blog by contributors Ross and jmc, covering topics like the gold standard, Ron Paul's 2008 presidential campaign, and critiques of economists like Paul Krugman and Thomas Sowell. Running from 2005 through 2009, the site reflects a Mises/Rothbard-influenced perspective with links to prominent libertarian and anti-war blogs.
  • 2026-07-07
    Leviathan Slayer
    August 2005: Leviathan Slayer is a libertarian political blog run by contributors Ross and jmc, covering topics like free trade, Austrian economics, Ron Paul, and critiques of government policy. Posts take aim at figures like Paul Krugman and Thomas Sowell while championing gold standard economics and anti-interventionist foreign policy.
  • 2026-07-07
    Lovearth.net - Connect Through 1000+ EcoHumanePoliticalSpiritual Websites
    Lovearth.net is a sprawling activist directory created by Mark R. Elsis, linking to over 1000 sites covering environmentalism, political commentary, spirituality, and social justice causes. Visitors can explore resources on global warming, U.S. military spending, corporate power, Palestine-Israel, and more, all framed through a progressive, eco-humanist lens.
  • 2026-07-07
    Marxistiskt Forum
    Marxistiskt Forum is a Swedish-language resource collecting texts by Karl Marx, Friedrich Engels, and other thinkers, alongside debate articles, journal articles, academic essays, and exam papers. It serves as a reference hub for Marxist theory and socialist thought for Swedish-speaking readers.
  • 2026-07-07
    Marxists Internet Archive
    The Marxists Internet Archive is one of the largest online libraries of leftist political theory, hosting works from over 720 authors including Marx, Engels, Lenin, and Trotsky in 80 languages. Researchers and activists alike will find a vast collection of books, periodicals, speeches, and primary texts covering Marxism, socialism, communism, and related political philosophy.
  • 2026-07-07
    net.wars - computers, freedom, and privacy
    Net.wars is a long-running column and blog by Wendy Grossman covering the intersection of computers, freedom, and privacy, with entries dating back to 2001. Posts tackle surveillance, AI ethics, digital rights, and tech policy with sharp commentary and references to current research and journalism.
  • 2026-07-07
    no stinking loops
    A curated links directory covering conservative and defense-oriented web resources, organized into sections ranging from Krav Maga and military blogs to political commentary, diplomacy, and book reviews. The collection reflects a distinct hawkish, right-leaning perspective with an eclectic mix of war bloggers, periodicals like National Review and The Claremont Institute, and miscellaneous oddities.
  • 2026-07-07
    rat haus reality, ratical branch
    Rat Haus Reality is a sprawling activist and political commentary site covering nuclear waste dangers, corporate governance critique, the 9-11 attacks as crimes against humanity, and the legacy of Martin Luther King Jr.'s assassination trial. Drawing on indigenous philosophy like the Hopi concept of Koyaanisqatsi, it advocates for environmental renewal, hemp as a resource, and conscious alternatives to consumer culture.
  • 2026-07-07
    Reese Armstrong's [reesericci] homepage
    Reese Armstrong's personal homepage showcases their work as a student advocate, democratic socialist, and political candidate running for Travis County Commissioner in Precinct 2 in Austin, Texas. Visitors will find links to campaign resources, student organizing projects like LASA YDSA and Students United, and open-source software tools built by Reese.
  • 2026-07-07
    Richard Stallman's Personal Page
    The official personal site of Richard Stallman, founder of the GNU Project and free software movement, featuring his political articles, notes on technology companies, activism around software freedom, and commentary on civil liberties. Visitors will find an extensive archive of essays, humor, travel writing, and Stallman's ongoing advocacy against proprietary software and corporate overreach.
  • 2026-07-07
    suliman's blog
    Suliman is a political science student whose blog features sharp political essays on topics like war aesthetics, peace, and personal branding in the digital age. Hosted on Bearblog and part of the SimpleChats Webring, this thoughtful minimalist blog blends serious analysis with occasional lighter posts.
  • 2026-07-07
    The Ethical Spectacle
    Jonathan Wallace's long-running online journal explores ethics, free speech, and political events through sharp personal essays, with the site publishing continuously since January 1995. Highlights include a massive 16,000-page manuscript on the history of free speech, experimental hyper-fiction, and pointed commentary on current events from ICE enforcement to international politics.
  • 2026-07-07
    The Living Room Candidate
    The Living Room Candidate is an authoritative archive of presidential campaign television commercials spanning every election from 1952 to the present, hosted by the Museum of the Moving Image. Visitors can browse ads by year, type, issue, or curator-selected playlists, making it an invaluable resource for understanding how political advertising has shaped American democracy.
  • 2026-07-07
    Ville Kokkomäki
    Ville Kokkomäki is a Finnish blogger whose numbered essay archive covers Bitcoin, pacifism, peace studies, and geopolitics, with posts ranging from cryptocurrency philosophy to reflections on the Gaza conflict and NATO membership. The mix of Finnish and English writing, combined with deeply personal and politically engaged topics, makes this a distinctive window into one thoughtful person's evolving worldview.
  • 2026-07-07
    walmartwatch.com
    Walmart Watch was a campaign site dedicated to monitoring and critiquing the business practices of Walmart, one of the world's largest retailers. The site focused on labor rights, worker wages, corporate accountability, and the social impact of Walmart's policies on communities.
  • 2026-07-07
    We are Team Internet – Webrocker
    Webrocker's personal blog includes this post rallying support for net neutrality during the 2017 Battle for the Net campaign, urging readers to oppose FCC rollbacks of open internet rules. The site mixes German and English content across writing, drawing, photography, and links, with this entry serving as a call to action against ISP overreach.
  • 2026-07-07
    WHA!
    Yoyo's personal Neocities homepage blends self-expression with a strong pro-Palestinian political voice, featuring a blog, manifesto, book recommendations, and a quirky curse word collection. The site has a distinctly old-web handcrafted feel with webrings, guestbook, and collectible buttons alongside its heartfelt personal content.
  • 2026-07-07
    Who Rules America? Power, Politics, & Social Change
    Built around sociologist G. William Domhoff's decades of research, this site examines who holds power in America through analyses of the corporate elite, wealth inequality, and political influence. Featuring full-text book chapters, a Power Elite Database, lecture videos, and regularly updated articles, it serves as a comprehensive academic resource on power structure research.
  • 2026-07-07
    zanshin.net
    Mark H. Nichols runs this long-running personal site where programming reflections, technology commentary, and musings on tools like LLMs and Hugo sit alongside links to music compositions and reading notes. Posts lean technical, with a thoughtful voice covering software development, calendar sync headaches, and the nature of AI, making it a compelling read for developers with broad interests.
  • 2026-07-07
    alyxia.dev
    Alyxia is a full stack developer's personal homepage featuring a blog, a friends page, and links to their GitHub and Last.fm profiles. The site has a cozy, community-oriented feel with a webring and a collection of friend badges hinting at a rich social web presence.
  • 2026-07-07
    cpli.dev
    The personal site of cpli, a technically minded individual whose sparse but intriguing pages explore hypertext theory, home directory conventions, and links to esoteric programming and math resources like nlab, 1lab, and unison. The site has a distinctly academic-hacker flavor, touching on category theory, formal methods, and the philosophy of markup languages.
  • 2026-07-07
    gimcrackd.com
    A minimal page at gimcrackd.com hosting source code or programming resources, with almost no visible content beyond a single image. The sparse structure suggests a code snippet or developer resource page that has lost most of its content or relies on external references.
  • 2026-07-07
    eric-xia.com
    Eric Xia is a Brown University researcher and creative working at the intersection of math, computer science, and linguistics, with a focus on LLM interpretability and task adaptation. The site showcases his projects including word.golf (a word-meaning-based game), essays on linguistics, art, and technical papers on topics ranging from GANs to IPA pictography.
  • 2026-07-07
    plastic-idolatry.com
    The personal hub of Eiríkr Åsheim, a programmer and philosopher whose site links to original code projects including kind-projector, machinist, and spire alongside music, games, and writing. A compact but richly connected landing page revealing someone deeply embedded in open-source Scala development, tabletop games, and anarcho-syndicalist thought.
  • 2026-07-07
    mayaks.eu
    Maya Karabula-Stysiak's personal site showcases her programming projects including a JavaScript window manager, a 3D engine, and a Gemini-to-HTTP proxy, alongside a tiny-log of technical and philosophical musings. The site embraces the 'small web' aesthetic, offering a charming mix of coding experiments, drawings, and curated lists of books, music, and films.
  • 2026-07-07
    danluu.com
    Dan Luu's technical blog covers software engineering, systems performance, computer architecture, and the tech industry with a sharp analytical lens. Posts range from deep dives into cache incidents and latency pitfalls to broader essays on hiring, productivity, and organizational culture.
  • 2026-07-07
    silverskylabs.github.io
    Yakhak is a security research paper by Sanford Moskowitz at SilverSky Labs exposing a vulnerability in the Yik Yak anonymous social media iOS app that allowed full account takeover over a shared WiFi network. The site includes a detailed vulnerability analysis, proof-of-concept toolkit download, and step-by-step exploitation walkthrough using tools like Wireshark, sslsplit, and cycript.
  • 2026-07-07
    zesty.ca
    A browser-based JavaScript tool that lets you explore what Facebook publicly exposes about users and their friends through the Facebook Graph API. Built by the creator of zesty.ca, this privacy transparency tool runs entirely client-side, meaning no data passes through any server, making it a clever demonstration of API browsing and a useful privacy awareness resource.
  • 2026-07-07
    ecelis.remotes.club
    Ernesto's personal homepage introduces him as a remote worker with a background in software projects for Mexico's government and private sector. Outside of work, he shares interests in reading, music, hiking, and camping, giving the site a light outdoorsy personal flavor.
  • 2026-07-07
    wiki.c2.com
    This is the legendary Ward Cunningham wiki (c2.com), the original wiki ever created, focused on software development, programming patterns, and computer science concepts. The CamelCase page specifically documents the WikiWord naming convention that became foundational to wiki culture and collaborative web-based knowledge systems.
  • 2026-07-07
    tilde.town
    An interactive Turing machine simulator hosted on tilde.town, featuring a canvas-based visual display and an editable source code interface for running custom state machines. The included example implements Langton's Ant, making it a neat hands-on tool for exploring theoretical computation concepts.
  • 2026-07-07
    tilde.town
    A minimalist tilde.town experiment by troido featuring a simple browser-based chat interface with basic commands like '/nick' to change display names. The page is a bare-bones real-time messaging test, notable for its candid developer note about mysterious CPU usage creep over time.
  • 2026-07-07
    "Can you get cp to give a progress bar like wget?" - Chris Lamb
    Chris Lamb's technical blog features clever shell scripting tips, including this post demonstrating how to add a wget-style progress bar to the cp command using strace and awk. A concise and satisfying hack for Linux power users who want more feedback during file copy operations.
  • 2026-07-07
    #LAK13
    Recipes in capturing and analyzing data – Google Groups Dashboard using Yahoo Pipes (no code) – By @mhawksey: Martin Hawksey's technical blog covers data analytics, Google Sheets automation, and tools like Yahoo Pipes for capturing and processing online data without writing code. This particular post walks through building a Google Groups activity dashboard using RSS feeds and pipe manipulation, making it a useful resource for learning analytics enthusiasts and no-code data wranglers.
  • 2026-07-07
    $cript Fanatic
    How to Retrieve Remote MAC Address: The '$cript Fanatic' blog by Shay Levy focuses on PowerShell scripting tips and techniques, including practical code snippets like retrieving remote MAC addresses via ARP and ping. It's a handy reference for Windows administrators and PowerShell enthusiasts looking for quick, real-world scripting solutions.
  • 2026-07-07
    <(^.^)> tsuki
    Tuan (known online as tsuki) runs this minimalist blog covering programming, pixel art, music, and personal reflections, with notable posts on note-taking workflows and WebTV history. The site doubles as a showcase of handcrafted web aesthetics, featuring a custom classless CSS framework called Subreply CSS that Tuan created and shares openly.
  • 2026-07-07
    superneutron
    Superneutron's cozy Neocities corner highlights their interests in programming, drawing, and anime, with dedicated sections for artwork and coding projects. The site participates in several webrings including NoJS, Hotline, and Yesterweb, making it a small but connected node in the old-web revival community.
  • 2026-07-07
    · roytang.net
    Roy Tang's long-running personal blog covers programming, software development, gaming, and life in Metro Manila, active since the early 2000s. Posts range from weeknotes and game reviews to thoughtful essays on tech industry topics, blogging culture, and the evolving web.
  • 2026-07-07
    (blamedenny.3d.tc / mtndew417.serv00.net) // blamedenny's site
    Blamedenny's personal hub showcases a collection of self-made projects including Vertexia, a sandbox game, and an unofficial Brick Hill reverse engineering wiki. The creator, Denny, documents their work in PHP, HTML, CSS, and GameMaker 8.1 alongside quirky extras like a random NFT generator and legacy web archives.
  • 2026-07-07
    +/
    Run by a developer called matt, this minimal site is built around a love of programming, array languages like APL and K, and Emacs. The name '+/' is itself a nod to APL notation, signaling a technically-minded creator whose content appeals to fellow language and code enthusiasts.
  • 2026-07-07
    ./Martijn.sh > Blog
    Martijn's minimalist personal blog pulls posts directly from the Fediverse via Lemmy, with no cookies, no tracking, and a clean dark/light mode toggle. The site reflects its creator's passions for decentralized web infrastructure, open-source software, cybersecurity, and full-stack development.
  • 2026-07-07
    //⋆☀︎. /
    The personal homepage of a software engineer and indie game developer going by the handle 90-008, this site blends a retro aesthetic with live activity feeds showing recent GitHub commits, game sessions, and music listens. Visitors will find links to their development profiles, an angelsona lore section, a guestbook, and a stream of real-time coding activity across projects like 'fjall'.
  • 2026-07-07
    /dev/lawyer
    Kyle E. Mitchell's /dev/lawyer is a deeply substantive blog exploring the intersection of law, software licensing, and technology, written by a practicing attorney who specializes in open source and tech contracts. With hundreds of dated posts covering topics like open core licensing, plain language legal drafting, AI and legal advice, and software copyright, it is an invaluable resource for developers and lawyers alike.
  • 2026-07-07
    /home
    Manik Sharma's minimalist personal homepage serves as a hub linking to his blog, projects, webrings, and a company he's affiliated with. The sparse, text-only design and links to GitHub and 'things_ive_made' suggest a developer sharing their creative and technical work online.
  • 2026-07-07
    0xFF
    Paul Glushak (hxii) is a Python developer and R&D team lead who shares his personal projects, productivity experiments, and developer rants in a clean minimalist format. The site showcases tools like Hajime (a static site generator), Boku (a task runner), and Dengonban, alongside a journal of reflections on ADHD productivity, work culture, and software craftsmanship.
  • 2026-07-07
    3.0 DESIGN BABY
    Eniuu is a 19-year-old Polish hobbyist programmer who shares his projects and interests including Python, PHP, and web development alongside his passions for anime, niche electronic music genres like breakcore and speedcore, and games like Geometry Dash and Celeste. The site features a freshly redesigned responsive layout, links to his GitHub, LastFM, and MyAnimeList profiles, and participation in several webrings.
  • 2026-07-07
    3dgoose
    Jean-Louis, known online as 3dgoose, shares his personal projects including WIPE, a 3D graphics engine written in C99, alongside an economic manifesto and a fictional lore project called the Holy Goose Empire. The site reflects the work of a developer passionate about low-level programming, graphics programming, and politics, with links to his code repositories on Github and sourcehut.
  • 2026-07-07
    57R1N9p00L
    Thomas Seine's personal tech blog covers programming tutorials, Linux tips, and software development topics ranging from Spring Boot and Java to quantum computing and AI. Posts are thoughtful and practical, with titles addressing real-world developer problems like database cleanup automation, Podman networking issues, and the merits of learning Java.
  • 2026-07-07
    99 Bottles of Beer | Start
    A beloved programming curiosity site collecting over 1500 implementations of the '99 Bottles of Beer' song written in different programming languages and variations. Created by Oliver, Gregor, and Stefan, it serves as a quirky Rosetta Stone for programmers to compare syntax and style across languages, with community ratings and submission features.
  • 2026-07-07
    data:blog.pageTitle/
    A technical blog covering ASP.NET, C#, SQL, jQuery, and the broader.NET framework ecosystem with practical tutorials and code examples. This particular post walks through implementing globalization and localization in ASP.NET 2.0 step by step, making it a useful reference for developers working with multi-language web applications.
  • 2026-07-07
    [7vector's homepage]
    7vector's personal corner of the web showcases their p5.js coding experiments, an unfinished indie game called Star Map, and a manufacturing simulator called Industrial Grade Doohickey. The site blends creative coding with digital art interests and links out to their social presence across Fediverse platforms and Pixilart.
  • 2026-07-07
    A Machine Learning Crash Course
    Milo Trujillo's technical blog features a detailed machine learning crash course repurposed from a real masters-level network science lecture, covering supervised and unsupervised learning with code examples. The post walks through foundational ML concepts, feature preparation, and hands-on techniques using datasets like California Housing, making it a genuinely useful self-contained reference for students and developers.
  • 2026-07-07
    About · Jonathan Chan
    Jonathan Chan is a CS PhD student at UPenn whose personal site showcases his academic research in programming language theory, including dependent types, type theory, proof assistants, and compilers. Visitors will find links to his published and forthcoming papers at venues like POPL, ICFP, and OOPSLA, alongside a blog, CV, and film photography.
  • 2026-07-07
    About me | max.hn
    Max Hoffmann is a German full-stack software developer with over 12 years of professional experience, passionate about building tools for a free, decentralized, and democratic web. His site showcases projects like a group decision-making tool, a universal basic income tax calculator, and his work at a worker-owned UBI research organization.
  • 2026-07-07
    About · Chameth.com
    Chris Smith is a UK-based software developer whose personal site blends a technical blog with a rich collection of side projects, code snippets, film logs, and monthly life updates. The site has a charming self-aware personality, complete with a trading-card-style intro and a custom 'nod' button that lets visitors react without any tracking.
  • 2026-07-07
    aboutdavid
    David is a high-schooler who codes open-source projects, including JavaScript tools for syncing budgets, handling RSS feeds, and using Notion as a CMS. The site showcases a handful of GitHub projects with live commit tracking, contact details, and a clean minimal layout.
  • 2026-07-07
    akavel's digital garden
    Akavel's digital garden is a personal knowledge base mixing programming notes, Nix/NixOS tips, embedded systems experiments, and hobbyist interests like tabletop RPGs and LEGO. Posts are organized by maturity using a seedling-to-ripe metaphor, making it a thoughtfully tended collection of technical and creative ideas.
  • 2026-07-07
    AKBatten
    AKBatten is a personal project write-up site covering a wide range of technical topics including self-hosted web services, embedded systems, Linux configuration, and ham radio builds. The creator documents hands-on projects like designing a CPU architecture, deploying Nextcloud, building DIY antennas, and programming a Nintendo DS, making it a rewarding browse for hardware and software hobbyists alike.
  • 2026-07-07
    Ake's corner
    Ake's corner is a personal programming hub packed with JavaScript experiments, small games, and projects ranging from a diff tool to a retro-styled entertainment system. Visitors can explore a demolab of random sketches, a wiki-like knowledge base, web design experiments, and tech notes, making it a surprisingly layered creative coding space.
  • 2026-07-07
    alan's home page
    Alan W. Smith's personal corner of the web, active since 1999, hosts thousands of pages of programming tutorials, weeknotes, and technical posts covering Python, JavaScript, jq, static site generators, and more. He also develops a web component called Bitty and shares live coding sessions on Twitch and YouTube, making this a rich destination for developers who enjoy following a maker's ongoing experiments.
  • 2026-07-07
    Alcyone Systems
    Erik Max Francis has maintained this personal hub since 1995, offering a sprawling collection of open-source Python software including templating systems, cellular automata engines, orbital mechanics calculators, and much more. The site also links to affiliated projects covering astronomy, web design, and politics, making it a fascinating snapshot of one prolific developer's decades of work.
  • 2026-07-07
    Alexandru-Paul Copil | Home
    Alexandru-Paul Copil is a System Engineer and security enthusiast who shares technical posts covering APIs, Golang, Raspberry Pi, Markov chains, and Linux systems administration. Built with Hugo and deliberately free of JavaScript, the site blends hands-on coding projects with sysadmin humor and the occasional hiking adventure.
  • 2026-07-07
    Alexey's blog
    Alexey Zabelin's personal tech blog covers programming topics ranging from Rust and Haskell web development to open source contributions and Linux terminal tweaks. Posts are thoughtful and practical, with multi-minute reads that walk through real projects like building a Haskell API wrapper and a Rust/Rocket/Diesel web app skeleton.
  • 2026-07-07
    alexsci.com
    Robert Alexander's personal site hosts a tech blog focused on Internet technology and security, alongside a collection of open-source hobby projects. Visitors will find tools like an RSS Blogroll Network mapper, a license approval GitHub Action, a white noise web app, and even simple games for toddlers, all with links to code repositories.
  • 2026-07-07
    alexwlchan
    Alex Chan's personal site blends technical writing with creative and personal reflections, covering software development, digital preservation, Python, Git, and accessibility. Recent articles include a custom static site generator, webcam toy apps, and parody movie posters, making it a rich mix of code-focused tutorials and playful projects.

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