Linux & Unix
175 sites
https://bacardi55.io/
Bacardi55's Web Cave is the personal blog and digital home of a Solutions Architect who writes about selfhosting, data privacy, open source software, and Linux tools. Posts cover everything from keyboard reviews to SSH configuration, Gemini protocol content, and DevSecOps tinkering, making it a treasure trove for indie web and self-hosted tech enthusiasts.
https://tilde.club/~pemt
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.
https://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.
https://jmtd.net/log/feed
Jonathan Dowland's weblog covers Linux, Debian, and open-source software development with a technical depth that rewards curious readers. Posts range from creating custom font glyphs for the Debian swirl to shell prompt customization and FOSDEM conference coverage.
https://tilde.wiki/Tildeverse
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.
https://sneexy.synth.download/
Ruben (aka Sneexy) is a self-described 'Professional Computer Toucher' who documents his deep enthusiasm for Linux, running a customized Kinoite variant built with BlueBuild on personal devices and Fedora Server in server environments. The site doubles as a hub for a small community of synth-themed services, complete with webrings, social links, and a charming old-web aesthetic.
https://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.
http://okturing.com/
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.
https://tilde.club/~pfhawkins/othertildes.html
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.
https://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.