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10634 links · page 54 of 107


  • 2026-07-07
    Smitheroons' tilde.club page
    Smitheroons' tilde.club page is a sparse personal homepage where the author shares a brief life update about transitioning into an SDET (Software Development Engineer in Test) role and the imposter syndrome that comes with it. Part of the tilde.club community, this minimal page hints at future updates and participates in a link ring.
  • 2026-07-07
    Software development et al - Stavros' Stuff
    Stavros is a freelance Python developer from Greece who shares tutorials, side projects, and technical musings ranging from networking essentials to DIY hardware builds like a pocket voice recorder and a small LED panel. The site blends practical how-to guides with hands-on maker projects, offering a genuine look into a working developer's tinkering and learning over the years.
  • 2026-07-07
    Software.next
    Software.next is a programming blog by plukevdh covering topics like Ruby methods, Rails internals, PostgreSQL quirks, and the evolving debate between web and native app development. The posts are technical and reflective, documenting real-world discoveries and insights aimed at fellow software developers.
  • 2026-07-07
    Solarium
    Solarium is a personal tech site featuring a collection of coding projects with view counts, including tools like pastebeam-c and chatger, suggesting a developer who enjoys building small utilities and software experiments. The site also notes TLS support and links to a circle of like-minded indie web developers, giving it a cozy old-web community feel.
  • 2026-07-07
    Songs on the Security of Networks
    Michał 'rysiek' Woźniak writes 'Songs on the Security of Networks', a technically sharp blog covering network security, infrastructure risks, AI tooling failures, and digital rights. Posts dive deep into topics like AWS outages caused by agentic AI systems, Telegram's security shortcomings, and the hidden dangers of LLM-based automation in production environments.
  • 2026-07-07
    soph's blog and information
    Soph is a 19-year-old Latvian full-stack developer who showcases a diverse portfolio of open-source projects spanning music library tools, Discord bots, Minecraft plugins, ham radio utilities, and more. The site doubles as a personal hub with a blog, project listings, and a surprisingly massive 6-gigabyte MIDI collection.
  • 2026-07-07
    Spencer Freebairn
    Spencer Freebairn's personal portfolio showcases his work as a Quality Engineer, featuring projects like a tortilleria website, a cash adder tool, and an Etch game. The site serves as a clean hub linking to his GitHub, LinkedIn, and a small collection of software projects.
  • 2026-07-07
    Spencer Paulmark
    Spencer Paulmark's personal developer page showcases two original programming projects, including Big Brother Bots, a simulation game with 300+ premade casts and complex state management, and Project LSG, an experimental social network visualizer built on real online game data. Clean and minimal, the site offers source code links and blog posts for each project, giving a peek into the developer's interests in social simulation and network visualization.
  • 2026-07-07
    splitbrain.org - blog
    Andreas Gohr's long-running personal tech blog, subtitled 'electronic brain surgery since 2001,' covers practical programming tips, system administration, and software hacks. Recent posts include scripting Gmail cleanup with Google Apps Script, making it a handy resource for developers solving everyday technical problems.
  • 2026-07-07
    Spotlight's Site
    Spotlight is a systems programmer and security researcher specializing in Apple platforms, reverse engineering, and Wii homebrew development. The site showcases impressive technical projects including the Open Shop Channel, WiiLink channel revival efforts, and independent macOS internals research involving undocumented APIs and sandbox vulnerabilities.
  • 2026-07-07
    SQL Injection Attacks by Example
    Steve Friedl's detailed technical walkthrough of SQL injection attacks demonstrates real-world exploitation techniques step by step, from schema discovery to brute-force password guessing. Written as a narrative of an actual security engagement, it covers both attack methods and mitigations, making it an invaluable reference for developers and security professionals alike.
  • 2026-07-07
    stackp — Droopy – easy file receiving
    Droopy is a lightweight Python mini web server created by Pierre (stackp) that lets others upload files directly to your computer via a simple browser interface. The project page includes usage instructions, command-line options, licensing details, and links to the source repository, making it a handy tool for quick peer-to-peer file transfers without fussing with slow messenger transfers.
  • 2026-07-07
    Stale City
    Stale City is a personal tech blog where the author shares reflections on software development, including a deep-dive post about building a UI utility library from scratch and the lessons learned from that journey. The writing is thoughtful and draws creative parallels between coding projects and things like Wintergatan's Marble Machine, making it an engaging read for developers who enjoy introspective technical writing.
  • 2026-07-07
    Stephensworld
    Stephensworld is S.P. Hurlsmith's personal corner of the internet, featuring blog posts, project updates, and tutorials from a self-described hobbyist programmer who works in C and C++. The site also touches on drawing, storytelling, and an original game called Wawacraft, making it a lively snapshot of a creative technologist's ongoing work.
  • 2026-07-07
    Steve's Bear Blog ʕ º ᴥ ºʔ
    Steve Dylan's personal Bear Blog serves as a hub for a DX engineer passionate about building developer tools and advocating for an open, secure, and free web. The site touches on sustainable web practices, writing, and art, with a minimalist aesthetic that embodies its open-web philosophy.
  • 2026-07-07
    strat
    Strat's personal site is a no-frills homepage from a low-level programmer who works primarily in C and Rust, self-hosts Minecraft servers, a Forgejo git instance, and an AWS setup. Alongside technical interests, the site touches on snowboarding, learning German, FOSS advocacy, and anime fandom, with a refreshingly minimal design philosophy that prioritizes content over flashy graphics.
  • 2026-07-07
    STRML
    Projects and Work: STRML is a minimalist portfolio showcasing the projects and work of developer Samuel Reed, with content rendered through a distinctive animated typing effect. The site highlights creative technical projects that blend programming with interactive web experiences.
  • 2026-07-07
    Susam Pal
    Susam Pal's long-running technical blog covers programming, mathematics, and computing curiosities spanning over two decades of posts. Topics range from Emacs tricks and shell scripting to abstract algebra, CSS puzzles, and low-level DOS programming, making it a rich archive for curious technologists.
  • 2026-07-07
    Sympolymathesy, by Chris Krycho
    Chris Krycho's personal site 'Sympolymathesy' is a rich collection of essays, notes, and talks spanning software engineering, theology, ethics, and the philosophy of technology. A software engineer and composer by trade, Krycho publishes deeply considered pieces on topics like version control systems, open source infrastructure, AI ethics, and the intersection of faith and technology.
  • 2026-07-07
    Szymon Kaliski
    Szymon Kaliski is an independent consultant and researcher specializing in computational interfaces, LLMs, and programmable ink, sharing quarterly newsletter updates on his technical explorations and personal projects. The site blends software development work, ambient music, independent research, and personal habit tracking into a thoughtfully documented personal presence.
  • 2026-07-07
    T-SQl Cursor Example
    A concise technical reference page by Jack Donnell covering T-SQL cursor syntax with a practical example for database developers. The page focuses specifically on how to declare and use cursors in Transact-SQL, making it a quick reference for SQL Server programmers.
  • 2026-07-07
    tabby puddle
    Tabby's personal corner of the web blends quirky JavaScript experiments with a genuine passion for toki pona, the constructed minimalist language that inspired the site's creation. Visitors can play with a unit converter, Fibonacci sequence generator, a simple clicker, and an octal timekeeping clock, alongside a personal image gallery and update log.
  • 2026-07-07
    Tales from a solo dev | Tommy Palmer
    Tommy Palmer, a London-based web developer, shares hard-won lessons from his time as the sole developer at CastRooms, a DJ video streaming startup. The post covers practical advice on shipping code fast, trusting your instincts, and surviving the isolation of solo development on complex browser-based audio and video projects.
  • 2026-07-07
    Tanner's Site
    Tanner is a firmware and hardware engineer from Calgary who shares his software projects, DIY creations, and technical writing on this personal site. Highlights include open-source tools like a browser notification service, a command-line pastebin, and a makerspace member portal, alongside physical builds like an LED dress, a custom air quality monitor, and a garage door opener hack.
  • 2026-07-07
    Teletexto #012 - Adrianistán
    Adrianistán is the personal tech blog of Adrián Arroyo Calle, featuring a recurring 'Teletexto' link roundup series that curates interesting programming and technology articles. Each edition dives into topics like APL, Clojure, Prolog, game development, concurrency patterns, and digital policy, making it a rich resource for curious developers.
  • 2026-07-07
    The Advantages Of Flexible Typing
    An official SQLite documentation page that makes a detailed case for the database engine's flexible typing system, explaining why storing any value in any column is a feature rather than a flaw. It covers practical use cases like attribute tables, dirty data storage, and dynamic languages, while systematically rebutting common objections to flexible typing.
  • 2026-07-07
    The Blog of Random
    Zerolimits.dev hosts a wide-ranging personal blog covering topics from cybersecurity and threat modelling to mathematics, chaos theory, and quantum physics. Posts span several years and mix technical deep-dives like 'How to Make an OS' and 'Finding Vulnerabilities in Secton' with lighter curiosities such as the history of toilet paper.
  • 2026-07-07
    The Curse and Blessings of Dynamic SQL
    Erland Sommarskog, a SQL Server MVP, presents an exhaustive technical guide to dynamic SQL covering best practices, performance considerations, SQL injection risks, and real-world use cases for both developers and DBAs. With 166 code examples and dozens of detailed sections, this article is a landmark reference for anyone working with SQL Server who wants to understand when and how to use dynamic SQL safely and effectively.
  • 2026-07-07
    the greg technology blog
    Greg's technology blog covers a wide range of developer topics including cloud hosting platforms, GitHub Actions tricks, Flask deployments, and SQL internals, written in a casual and opinionated voice. Posts range from hands-on technical tutorials to sharp commentary on the indie web and platform decay, making it a fun read for developers who care about the open internet.
  • 2026-07-07
    The Grug Brained Developer
    Written in the voice of a caveman programmer named Grug, this humorous yet genuinely insightful guide tackles software development philosophy with sections on complexity, testing, microservices, type systems, and other real engineering concerns. The deliberately simple writing style makes it both entertaining and surprisingly practical for developers of all experience levels.
  • 2026-07-07
    The Rat Shack
    The Rat Shack is a sprawling personal site by a programmer and creature-sim enthusiast covering game dev experiments in Godot, 3D art in Blender, pixel art, and deep dives into virtual pet games like Petz and Creatures. Packed with years of dated posts, tutorials, reviews, and creative experiments, it rewards curious visitors with everything from Kotlin programming notes to Raveen Kat retrospectives and homemade spline creatures.
  • 2026-07-07
    The Universe of Discourse
    Mark Dominus (MJD) has been writing 'The Universe of Discourse' since 2005, covering mathematics, programming, language, etymology, and Haskell with a distinctly intellectual and curious voice. With hundreds of posts across subtopics and nearly two decades of archives, this is a deeply personal and wide-ranging technical blog that rewards explorers with everything from git utilities to quincunx symmetry.
  • 2026-07-07
    The Unofficial Ruby Usage Guide
    Originally written by Ian Macdonald for internal use at Google, this guide covers Ruby coding style and best practices for system administration scripting. It offers detailed guidelines on code organization, exceptions, indentation, debugging, benchmarking, and unit testing, making it a practical reference for Ruby programmers seeking a consistent stylistic vocabulary.
  • 2026-07-07
    thefreecountry.com
    Free Programmers' Resources, Free Webmasters' Resources, Free Security Resources: thefreecountry.com is a massive curated directory of free resources for programmers, webmasters, and security enthusiasts, covering everything from compilers and source code libraries to PHP scripts, web hosting, and security tools. Created by Christopher Heng, the site has been carefully maintained over many years and serves as a go-to reference for developers seeking free and open-source software, utilities, and tutorials.
  • 2026-07-07
    TheLastGimbus
    TheLastGimbus is a developer's personal hub showcasing a variety of open-source projects, including FreeBuddy (a headphone companion app), Roll-API, and MIDI-to-Sprig. The site links out to a GitHub profile packed with interesting software experiments and serves as a lightweight landing page for a prolific coder.
  • 2026-07-07
    theo court
    Theo Court's personal website showcases his passion for tinkering with computers and working on various software projects in his free time. The site links out to his presence on the Fediverse, GitHub, and Bluesky, hinting at an open-source and indie web-oriented personality.
  • 2026-07-07
    thesephist.com
    Linus (thesephist) is a software researcher and engineer whose site collects over a decade of writing on AI interfaces, knowledge tools, and creative software, alongside more than 100 open side projects ranging from compilers to personal productivity tools. A fascinating portal into the mind of someone deeply invested in how language models can augment human thinking and expression.
  • 2026-07-07
    This is one of Alan's web pages
    Alan's omg.lol homepage is a data science professional's personal hub linking out to his data blog, a Peloton Shiny app called RideShare, a Last.fm stats tool called TuneR, and his Destiny gaming content. Equal parts data nerd and hobbyist, the page offers a quick snapshot of Alan's many online presences.
  • 2026-07-07
    Thou Art Programmer
    A hobbyist programmer's tutorial-style article explaining isometric projection in video games, covering how perspective elimination works and how to implement an isometric tile renderer. Part of a larger personal site with sections on GP32 development, NES graphics, and sprite poses, this page digs into the math and code behind classic isometric game engines.
  • 2026-07-07
    tiago's website
    Tiago is a student from Portugal who has built an impressive collection of self-made web tools, including a homemade search engine, a reverse-engineered Twitter API client, a proof-of-work CAPTCHA alternative, and a link analytics tracker. The site serves as a portfolio-style hub showcasing original open-source projects that tackle privacy, data analysis, and web infrastructure.
  • 2026-07-07
    Tilde Club Link Vis
    A creative data visualization project by a Tilde Club member that renders an interactive network graph of links between users on the tilde.club shared Unix server. Built with D3.js and Perl scraping tools, the graph lets visitors zoom, drag nodes, and mouseover to explore the web of connections among the early Tilde Club community.
  • 2026-07-07
    Tim Bachmann
    Tim Bachmann is a Swiss software engineer who shares his personal projects, blog posts, and tools built with technologies like Rust, JavaScript, Kotlin, and Ansible. Visitors will find a mix of open-source apps, self-hosting guides, and dev tutorials reflecting Tim's work across web, Android, and CLI development.
  • 2026-07-07
    Today I Learned
    Run by ve3zsh on tilde.club, this 'Today I Learned' blog features thoughtful, opinionated commentary on programming, software complexity, operating systems, security, and tech culture. Each entry digs deep into topics like Linux adoption, software bloat, embedded systems, and privacy, making it a rewarding read for anyone who thinks seriously about how technology actually works.
  • 2026-07-07
    Today's Pointless Click
    Andrew Blakey's collection of interactive browser-based experiments and mini-projects spans from a Game Boy emulator and a Chip8 emulator to physics simulations like Brownian Motion and fun diversions like Googly eyes and Rubik's cube. Each dated entry is a self-contained pointless-but-delightful click, making this a charming showcase of creative coding and web tinkering.
  • 2026-07-07
    Todepond dot com
    Todepond is the creative hub of Lu (Luke) Wilson, a researcher and programmer known for surreal coding videos, talks on spatial programming, and experimental tools like Cellpond, Sandpond, and the esoteric language DreamBerd. The site showcases a rich body of work including conference talks, research papers, music sets, and interactive prototypes that blur the line between code, art, and play.
  • 2026-07-07
    Tom's Tilde Club
    Tom's Tilde Club page showcases an implementation of Conway's Game of Life powered by Guile Scheme, displaying classic cellular automaton patterns like Glider, DieHard, Blinker, Penta-Decathlon, and Acorn. Visitors can adjust the generation counter in the URL to watch the simulations evolve step by step, making it a neat interactive programming demonstration.
  • 2026-07-07
    Tori's Corner 3.0
    Tori's Corner is the personal website of a teen programmer passionate about low-level programming and game modding, now on its third version. The site features a blog, portfolio, guestbook, and ongoing projects including Alpha Advanced and Solkern.
  • 2026-07-07
    toyos.dev
    Home: Guillermo Toyos-Marfurt is a computer scientist and PhD researcher at Institut Polytechnique de Paris, sharing his work on distributed systems, consensus algorithms, and blockchain state machine replication protocols. The site includes published academic papers, a portfolio of public projects, and course notes, making it a tidy hub for a serious researcher's professional presence.
  • 2026-07-07
    Tracking packages
    Beto Dealmeida shares a clever IndieWeb project where he built a custom 'package' post type on his personal blog to track shipments via EasyPost, complete with maps, phone notifications, and webhooks. The post combines his love of mailing cassette tapes for 4-track collaborations with hands-on web development, making it a fascinating read for anyone interested in self-hosted tools and the IndieWeb movement.
  • 2026-07-07
    TrebledJ's Pages - TrebledJ's personal blog on programming, cybersecurity, music, and memes.
    Johnathan (TrebledJ) runs a technical blog covering cybersecurity research, CVE discoveries, and programming tutorials, with notable posts on reverse engineering PLCs, XSS filter bypasses, and multi-threaded Python. The site also weaves in music composition and digital audio synthesis, making it a rich blend of infosec depth and creative side projects.
  • 2026-07-07
    trimill
    Trimill's personal site showcases a collection of programming projects including CXGraph for visualizing complex functions, Talc (a terminal calculator and language written in Rust), and an RSS feed bundler. The site links out to a personal Git server and blog, making it a compact hub for a developer with a range of creative technical interests.
  • 2026-07-07
    Truttle1's Webpage
    Truttle1 is a software developer from Michigan who shares videos, games, and characters on this personal site, with a charming early post lamenting the pain of writing CSS for responsive layouts. The site is in its early stages but hints at a creative developer with a YouTube presence and original game/character content in the works.
  • 2026-07-07
    TwitArcs
    Jeff Clark's TwitArcs is a Java-based Twitter visualization tool that draws arc diagrams connecting repeated people mentions and common terms from any Twitter user's feed. It offers an intriguing data visualization approach to exploring social network patterns on early Twitter.
  • 2026-07-07
    ultlang's webpage
    Emma, known online as ultlang, shares a collection of small creative programming projects including a JavaScript minesweeper clone, a pixel font, a JavaScript synthesizer, and a constructed language called Peejosa. The site has a charmingly self-deprecating tone and also links to a micro-blog and an Ithkuil helper tool, making it a fun snapshot of a hobbyist coder-linguist's experiments.
  • 2026-07-07
    Unit Propagation - The Blog of Bob Rubbens
    Bob Rubbens is a PhD researcher who writes about programming, tools, and computer science topics ranging from LaTeX quirks and markdown workflows to Java exception systems and genetic programming experiments. The blog is a mix of practical technical tips, academic musings, and the occasional AI skepticism roundup, making it a rich resource for developers and researchers alike.
  • 2026-07-07
    UserJS.org - User JavaScript for Opera
    UserJS.org is a dedicated repository of User JavaScript scripts for the Opera browser, offering over 100 community-submitted scripts organized into categories like browser enhancements, fixes, developer tools, and site-specific tweaks. Visitors can browse, download, and submit scripts that extend Opera's functionality, with tutorials and tips to help users write their own.
  • 2026-07-07
    Vanten
    Vanten is the personal site of a Swedish software engineer and self-described geek, complete with a classic Geek Code block and fun web buttons. The site features devlogs covering projects like a Rust-based large number library and OS development, making it a charming slice of hacker culture.
  • 2026-07-07
    Versun
    Versun is a Chinese-language tech blog covering AI tools, large language models, and software development, with frequent posts on deploying and integrating platforms like OpenClaw, GPT, and Mac native apps. The creator shares hands-on tutorials, personal projects, and evaluations of cutting-edge AI and developer tooling with a practical, builder-focused perspective.
  • 2026-07-07
    vibasite - vibasite
    Viba's personal Neocities site documents their computer-based creations, including a custom static site generator built with Lua scripts and various constructed language experiments. The site has been evolving since 2016 and features a log, a creations showcase, and content in multiple conlangs including toki pona and vötgil.
  • 2026-07-07
    Vilson Vieira
    Vilson Vieira is an AI researcher, engineer, and artist based in Brazil whose personal site showcases open source projects spanning generative AI, creative coding, and machine learning. From autonomous AI art generators to blockchain visualizations and autodiff libraries, the breadth of his technical and artistic work makes this a fascinating window into computational creativity.
  • 2026-07-07
    Vio
    Vio (violunae) is a furry programmer and game modder who shares their skills in C#, Java, Python, and shader languages, along with a sprawling list of mods for Minecraft, Terraria, and Duck Game. A work-in-progress personal site from a member of the Lodestar Minecraft modding team, with plans to expand into art, music interests, and other personal content.
  • 2026-07-07
    Visual Basic Accelerator Home
    vbAccelerator is a free source code library dedicated to pushing Visual Basic beyond its limits, offering advanced tips, custom controls, and full source for UI components like icon menus, flat toolbars, and DirectX game sprites. Programmers looking to build modern-looking VB applications will find extensive Win32 API techniques, ActiveX controls, and annotated code samples covering graphics, registry access, and more.
  • 2026-07-07
    Visualizing Algorithms
    Mike Bostock's in-depth essay explores how algorithms can be understood through visualization, covering sampling, Poisson-disc distributions, Voronoi diagrams, and sorting with rich interactive diagrams. Adapted from his Eyeo 2014 talk, this piece bridges computer science and visual communication in a way that makes abstract algorithmic concepts genuinely intuitive.
  • 2026-07-07
    WebGL Fluid Simulation
    Created by Pavel Dobryakov, this interactive WebGL fluid simulation runs directly in the browser and supports mobile devices, letting visitors play with mesmerizing fluid dynamics in real time. The project showcases advanced GPU-accelerated graphics programming using WebGL shaders to simulate realistic fluid behavior.
  • 2026-07-07
    WebGL Water
    Evan Wallace's impressive WebGL Water demo showcases real-time raytraced reflections, refractions, caustics, and heightfield water simulation running entirely in the browser. A technically stunning interactive experiment that lets visitors draw ripples, move a sphere, and manipulate light direction to see advanced graphics techniques in action.
  • 2026-07-07
    Welcome [splitbrain.org]
    Andreas Gohr, a Berlin-based web developer and maker, shares two decades of blog posts covering programming projects, Linux home networking, open source tools, and creative experiments. The site is home to DokuWiki and other notable open source projects, making it a genuinely rich destination for developers and tinkerers alike.
  • 2026-07-07
    Welcome to Freewarejava.com, the place to find free Java applets, tutorials, references, Java books, and more!
    Freewarejava.com is a comprehensive directory of free Java applets, tutorials, books, and developer resources, boasting over 800 applets organized for both beginners and experienced developers. Visitors can browse source code, online Java books, JSP and servlet guides, and curated links to leading Java community sites.
  • 2026-07-07
    Welcome to jjanzen.ca
    J. Janzen is a computer science master's student at the University of Manitoba whose personal site doubles as a Git server and project host, with a focus on theoretical CS topics like computational geometry and microfluidic mixing algorithms. The site embraces old-web aesthetics and a strong anti-JavaScript philosophy, featuring updates, webrings, and handcrafted HTML that would feel right at home on early Geocities.
  • 2026-07-07
    welcome to my ~ backalley code.
    The tilde.town page of user ~ne1 showcases a collection of personal coding projects with a hacker-culture flair, including a collaborative text-based exploration game called Holodeck, an anonymous social platform called p0rtals, an encrypted note tool, and a SecureDrop-style anonymous submission system. Each project reflects a DIY ethos centered on privacy, anonymity, and community-built digital spaces.
  • 2026-07-07
    Welcome! • Christian Tietze
    Christian Tietze is a macOS and iOS developer, programming book author, and consultant who shares deep technical articles on Swift, TextKit, Emacs, and knowledge management systems like Zettelkasten. The site spans 10+ years of blog posts, wikis, and guides covering everything from selling apps with FastSpring to writing capability-aware FreeBSD apps in Swift.
  • 2026-07-07
    WellObserve
    Wu Yiming's personal research blog where original mathematical and computational geometry concepts are developed, including the "Wu-Surface," a novel interpolated surface representation structure with advanced control-point manipulation features. The site blends technical research notes with casual posts, offering a rare glimpse into independent geometry and graphics research from a Chinese developer.
  • 2026-07-07
    what is this | My Recurse Center Journal
    Greg's journal from a September-December 2023 batch at the Recurse Center documents a prolific sprint of side projects ranging from a Django starter kit and voice-AI demos to a restaurant memorial site and an interactive hub dashboard. The site doubles as a portfolio and blog, capturing the experimental, playful energy of a programmer pushing into new territory with tools like GitHub Actions, OCR, and speech recognition.
  • 2026-07-07
    wonger's website
    Justin (wonger) is a software developer who builds simple, useful tools including a terminal video player, a browser-based whiteboard, and Smash Bros. utilities, all showcased alongside his microblog and personal recommendations. The site blends a polished software portfolio with a warm personal voice, offering project demos, source code, blog posts, and even a curated list of favorite books and albums.
  • 2026-07-07
    woof
    A minimalist personal corner of the web by a developer who dabbles in programming and tinkering with their own site as a creative outlet. Features a guestbook project, a PGP key for encrypted contact, and a laid-back tone that captures the spirit of having your own small internet space.
  • 2026-07-07
    Working with email addresses in SQL Server
    Narayana Vyas Kondreddi's home page: Narayana Vyas Kondreddi's technical page dives deep into SQL Server topics, with this article covering how to properly store, validate, and restrict access to email addresses in SQL Server databases using T-SQL. The site also hosts a broader library of SQL Server resources, FAQs on replication, Visual Basic code samples, and ASP references.
  • 2026-07-07
    x-log
    Andreas Jaggi's personal technical weblog, running since 2002, covers programming, Linux administration, web design, networking, and security with short-form posts linking to useful resources and practical how-to snippets. Posts range from LVM partition management and Go coding principles to CSS tricks and Qubes OS tips, making it a useful bookmark for sysadmins and developers alike.
  • 2026-07-07
    Xe Iaso
    Xe Iaso is a prolific technical educator and developer relations professional based in Ottawa who has published over 400 articles exploring programming, AI, cloud infrastructure, and the occasional cursed technology mashup. The site features a rich archive of deep technical writing alongside conference talks, open source projects, and experiments spanning TypeScript, PostgreSQL, LLMs, and beyond.
  • 2026-07-07
    Xiokka's Webspace
    Xiokka's Webspace is the personal homepage of a programmer and electronics enthusiast who shares personal projects, web tools, articles, and a microblog alongside interests like cycling, cooking, and foraging. The site has a charming old-web aesthetic packed with banners, pixel buttons, and stamps, and includes handy utilities like a YouTube thumbnail grabber and URL enlarger.
  • 2026-07-07
    XML editors
    A curated directory of XML editors, listing both commercial and open-source options including well-known tools like XMLSpy, JEdit, and Stylus Studio. The site organizes editors into standard and WYSIWYG categories, making it a handy reference for developers searching for the right XML editing tool.
  • 2026-07-07
    xproot's website
    xproot is a Colombian developer and self-described 'random Internet person' who shares their passion for old computers, programming in languages like C#, Python, VB6, and Bash, and indie gaming. The site features a blog, guestbook, hardware specs for their main machine, and links to multiple social accounts, all wrapped in a charmingly chaotic personal homepage aesthetic.
  • 2026-07-07
    XXIIVV — In Transit
    XXIIVV is the digital library and creative universe of Devine Lu Linvega (Aliceffekt), a prolific programmer, artist, and musician known for building esoteric tools and languages like Uxn and Lietal. The wiki spans computing philosophy, conlang design, music systems, and minimalist software development, making it a deeply fascinating rabbit hole for creative technologists.
  • 2026-07-07
    YaBoiDev.
    YaBoiDev is a personal developer page by a self-taught programmer documenting their journey learning Assembly Language and Java, with a NASM tutorial and notes on MS-DOS executable formats. The site has a charming retro Neocities aesthetic and includes a guestbook, blog, and shareable 88x31 button.
  • 2026-07-07
    yarrie
    Yarrie is a developer's personal hub showcasing a collection of original software projects, including CLI tools for GIF metadata, a macOS launch agent remover, and a Discord bot for Wikimedia embeds. The site also hosts mirrored pages, image boards, and a microblog, making it a compact but productive corner of the web for a prolific open-source tinkerer.
  • 2026-07-07
    YuRo's Nest
    YuRo's Nest is the personal corner of a programmer and game developer who shares creative projects, cool internet finds, and a blog dedicated to 'retro internet sim' games. The site reflects a personality shaped by cats, sci-fi, and D&D, with an open invitation to collaborate on web or Unity projects.
  • 2026-07-07
    zane's site
    Zane Shaw (a.k.a. squidee) is a 20-year-old CS undergrad from Melbourne who builds games and websites for fun, sharing a portfolio, gallery, and guestbook with visitors. The site has a charming old-web aesthetic complete with webrings, a music player, CRT scanline effects, and links to cool sites from friends in the community.
  • 2026-07-07
    zanneth.com
    Zanneth is the personal blog and project showcase of Charles Magahern, a software engineer who writes about topics ranging from reverse engineering arcade hardware and USB hacking to book reviews and technology commentary. The site blends deep technical dives, such as dissecting KONAMI arcade disk images and PS-X EXE file formats, with thoughtful essays on internet privacy and linguistics.
  • 2026-07-07
    zera
    Kieran Klukas, a 17-year-old developer from Westerville, Ohio, showcases his passion for TypeScript, microcontrollers, Nix, CTFs, and FRC robotics programming through this minimal personal homepage. The site has a distinctly hacker-aesthetic with config presented as a Nix flake, links to a blog and verification page, and membership in several webrings including ctp.
  • 2026-07-07
    zerokspot.com
    Zerokspot is the personal blog of Horst Gutmann, a software developer from Graz, Austria working at Grafana Labs, who writes frequently about development workflows, open source software, and programming technologies. With over 2,000 posts spanning years of activity, the site also includes book reviews, travel notes, and community involvement in Go and Python user groups.
  • 2026-07-07
    ~bacardi55
    The sourcehut profile of developer bacardi55 showcases a collection of open-source projects including a minimal Hugo theme for the IndieWeb, Gemini protocol tools, and Wallabag-related code. A hub for anyone interested in the Gemini protocol, IndieWeb development, or lightweight web publishing tools.
  • 2026-07-07
    ~dzwdz
    dzwdz is a computer science student on tilde.town who tinkers with Tor bridges, IRC bots, and server infrastructure while sharing occasional blog posts on topics like TUI design and feed patterns. The site has a charming minimalist feel and reflects a technically curious personality drawn to both systems programming and playful "antics."
  • 2026-07-07
    ~jakintosh/index
    Jakintosh's personal knowledge base blends philosophical writing, programming notes, and hands-on woodworking projects into a beautifully structured 'garden and stream' format where living documents evolve alongside a chronological action log. Visitors will find detailed documentation of furniture builds, bicycle maintenance, and original philosophical work on topics like degrowth and collapse, making it a genuinely eclectic and thoughtful digital workspace.
  • 2026-07-07
    ~kjiwa
    Home: Kjiwa's personal technical blog covers a range of programming and systems topics, from exploiting Apache James vulnerabilities to writing a DOS boot sector and building a KDE application. The posts span from 2004 to 2016 and offer a glimpse into one developer's deep dives into low-level computing, Java, and Linux tools.
  • 2026-07-07
    ~minerobber
    Minerobber's tilde.town homepage showcases a variety of small programming projects, including a Python-based blog generator, a Brainfuck interpreter for the 3DS, an IRC quote database, and a haiku generator. The site is a compact but genuinely creative collection of hobbyist coding experiments from an active tilde.town community member.
  • 2026-07-07
    ~seirdy
    Seirdy's Sourcehut profile showcases a collection of open-source personal projects including dotfiles, a terminal-based dmenu replacement using FZF, MPD scripts, and bubblewrap sandboxing utilities. The projects lean heavily toward Linux power-user tooling, shell scripting, and system customization, making it a useful stop for anyone into Unix-style workflows.
  • 2026-07-07
    ~troido
    Troido's tilde.town home is a showcase of terminal-based multiplayer game projects, including AsciiFarm (a multiplayer ASCII RPG), a Tron clone, and an ASCII art collaborative town called Cadastre. The page logs development updates over the years and links to source code on GitHub, making it a fascinating peek into creative command-line game development.
  • 2026-07-07
    ~~~~~
    A minimalist homepage on tilde.town featuring an ASCII art cow and a brief personal introduction, linking out to the creator's Twitter and GitHub profiles. The sparse, text-art aesthetic is a nod to old-school Unix terminal culture and the tilde community collaborative server scene.
  • 2026-07-07
    ¬ just serendipity 🍀
    Thiago Perrotta's digital garden covers technology, open-source software, and continuous learning through a mix of coding notes, tips, and personal discoveries. Featured posts range from Claude Code tweaks to data privacy templates, making it a practical technical blog with an indie-web philosophy.
  • 2026-07-07
    首页 - 我的文章 | Mayx的博客
    Mayx's technical blog covers hands-on explorations of LLM deployment, XML/XSLT transformations, running Linux in the browser via WASM, Git repository recovery, and other programming curiosities. With 180 articles and over 620,000 characters of content, this Chinese-language developer blog is a rich archive of practical computing experiments and software engineering discoveries.
  • 2026-07-07
    ⌜ deity. ⌟ ⋯ the fanlisting for gods and goddesses
    Deity is a fanlisting dedicated to gods and goddesses of all mythologies and religions, hosted under The Fanlistings Network's Mythology/Religion category. Created by Aelyn as part of the Celestial Oracle Studio, it invites fans who admire any divine beings to join a community of 96 members spanning 23 countries.
  • 2026-07-07
    A Crossroads
    Church of Midnight is a darkly themed personal site presenting itself as a mysterious 'church' with sections called the Church and the Graveyard, evoking gothic and occult aesthetics. The sparse landing page serves as an atmospheric gateway, suggesting a site built around dark spirituality, gothic subculture, or midnight-flavored mysticism.

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