Computers & Internet
2825 sites
Subcategories:
- Demoscene (4)
- Programming (535)
- Web Security (28)
- Hardware (65)
- Software (301)
- Web Design (1378)
- Retro Computing (195)
- Linux & Unix (192)
- Encyclopedias & FAQs (109)
https://skylude.net/
Skylude is the hub for the Celestial Oracle Studio, a collective umbrella linking several personal domains including Aelysia.NET, Caelestis.NU, Enamour.NU, and others. The site serves as a landing page and studio index for a multi-domain old-web creative collective.
http://bertel.de/software/rdfc/index-en.html
RDFC is a free Windows console utility by Bertel that generates binary files of any size filled with random data, useful for developers who need to stress-test their applications with large files up to 1 TB. The page covers usage parameters, system requirements, and a direct ZIP download with MD5 checksum for verification.
https://webringdemo.netlify.app/
Nerds of the 90s is a demo webring project built to showcase how webrings work, using a nostalgic 90s internet theme as its example subject. The site includes member listings, an embed code snippet for badges, and instructions for forking the project to host your own webring on Github.
https://gnunet.org/
GNUnet's bibliography of selected papers in meshnetworking is a curated academic reference collection covering topics like peer-to-peer networking, cryptography, decentralization, and privacy-preserving systems. Organized by topic, date, and author, it serves as a deep research hub for anyone studying distributed networks, DHT protocols, and secure communication architectures.
https://imr3ked.neocities.org/
imr3ked's self-described 'place in space' is a laid-back personal homepage with no fixed focus, featuring a gif collection, links to a personal Soundcloud, game mods for Keep Talking and Nobody Explodes, and a Gifypet named Bitty. The site is charmingly unfinished and participates in the Hotline Webring, capturing the spirit of early personal web experimentation.
https://harvesim.neocities.org/
Created by Benoît Allard, this site presents an interactive browser-based simulation of a harvester autonomously cleaning a field using HTML5 canvas and real-time pathfinding logic. Visitors can experiment with different field shapes drawn from OpenStreetMap data, adjust simulation speed, and switch between piloting algorithms including a simple spiral and an enhanced headland-clearing method.
https://doesmysitedeserverecognition.com/
A practical checklist and reference guide for evaluating whether a website truly deserves recognition, awards, or citation as a best-practice example. It covers web accessibility standards (WCAG 2.0/2.1), the P.O.U.R. principles, screen reader compatibility, print stylesheets, valid code, and cross-browser support, with curated links to tools and further reading.
https://micropipes.com/
Wil Clouser's personal blog covers software development, security, and tech tinkering, with posts ranging from Mozilla Accounts password hashing internals to jailbreaking a Nixplay photo frame. The mix of low-level engineering insights and hands-on hardware hacks makes it a rewarding read for developers and hobbyist tinkerers alike.
https://skeleg.org/
Skeleg's personal site showcases a range of hands-on technical projects including a custom gaming mouse build, a Wii Remote IoT setup, a headphone stand, and a digital clock/pomodoro timer. The site also features posts on topics like TCP file transfer programs in C and SerenityOS contributions, making it a great snapshot of a hobbyist programmer's ongoing tinkering.
https://aa-aa-mic-test.neocities.org/
A brand-new personal site by a teen who calls themselves Mizu, built entirely from scratch without templates as their very first coding project. The site is charmingly self-aware about its work-in-progress nature, featuring a Raggedy Ann welcome and promises of content about their interests as the site grows.