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://pyrox.dev/
Dish is a student, sysadmin, and self-described UX crafter whose personal site focuses on accessible, secure, and enjoyable computing experiences. The site is freshly launched with a blog and projects section, offering a glimpse into a technically minded person passionate about systems and user experience.
https://xn--z7x.xn--6frz82g/
A minimalist personal homepage styled as a terminal interface, titled 'Cat Move' in Japanese, with a sparse command-line aesthetic and links to a blog, GitHub, and webring. The site is light on content but has a distinctive lo-fi, old-web charm built around a cat theme.
https://mac.elated.com/2008/07/27/how-to-get-dashboard-widgets-on-your-desktop
Reality Distortion is a Mac-focused blog covering day-to-day tips, tricks, news, and how-to guides for Mac OS X and Apple products. This particular post walks readers through enabling Dashboard widgets on the desktop using developer mode or third-party tools, with clear terminal commands and practical examples.
https://ambylastname.xyz/
Allison (amby) is a programmer and musician who built this site with her own homemade static site generator, and showcases projects like Jamforth (a personal Forth implementation), staticcc, and a Forth-based text preprocessor. The site blends a quirky personal presence with a genuine focus on software development tools and open-source tinkering.
https://a11y-webring.club/
A webring connecting 111 digital accessibility practitioners, bringing together professionals dedicated to making the web more inclusive and usable for everyone. Created by Eric Bailey, the site includes membership listings, joining instructions, and an FAQ covering what accessibility (a11y) means and why it matters.
https://syslbnth.neocities.org/nexus
Phantom, known across platforms as radicalhelmet and qcom, has built a personal hub collecting years of videogame criticism and criticism for outlets like Unwinnable Magazine alongside hobbyist code with a particular love for assembly language. Visitors will find terminal games, Emacs configs, a Game Boy Camera gallery, and a ROMhacking project, all wrapped in an atmospheric old-web aesthetic.
https://cosmicqbit.dev/blog
CosmicQbit's personal tech blog covers cloud computing, Linux, web development, and digital privacy with posts ranging from Docker tutorials to WebRTC leak prevention. The archive spans several years of hands-on technical writing, making it a useful resource for developers and privacy-conscious users alike.
https://bladesplace.id.au/geocities-neighborhoods-suburbs.html
Blade's Place hosts a comprehensive reference guide to every GeoCities Homestead neighborhood and suburb, complete with icons, history, and a detailed explanation of how the old themed address system worked. This lovingly researched page is an invaluable resource for anyone interested in early web history, preserving details about the community structure that made GeoCities a landmark of the 1990s internet.
http://gor.net/encyclopedia.html
A bare-bones page from gor.net serving what appears to be an encyclopedia resource, with virtually no visible content beyond a single image. The site's minimal structure makes it difficult to assess its original purpose or scope.
https://aaadaaam.com/notes/no-class
Adam Stoddard's technical notes site features deep dives into modern CSS techniques, including his experiment with building a fully class-free website using only semantic HTML elements and tag selectors. The writing is thoughtful and opinionated, with a focus on CSS architecture, cascade layers, and the philosophy of constraint-driven design.