Linux & Unix
192 sites
https://tilde.town/~kirch/tricks.html
Kirch shares a concise collection of clever SSH and terminal tricks for tilde.town users, covering topics like reconnecting to screen sessions, tunneling through HTTPS proxies, and managing authorized keys. The tips are practical and specific, making it a handy reference for anyone navigating Unix-style remote shell environments.
https://tilde.club/~dgy
The .Files is a technical blog by dgy on tilde.club covering Linux tooling, static site generation, and terminal-based workflows including Hugo, Drone CI, Gitea, BSPWM, and Vim. Posts are concise and practical, walking through real configuration challenges like multimonitor setups and integrating FZF as a Vim package.
https://tilde.town/~cmr
A minimalist tilde.town user page for 'cmr' rendered entirely in ASCII art, showcasing the creative text-based aesthetic of the tilde.town public Unix community. The page features elaborate ASCII illustrations including landscapes and structures, embodying the collaborative, terminal-native spirit of tilde culture.
http://tilde.club/~bradley
Bradley's tilde.club corner features a thoughtful post about customizing the Bash prompt in Linux, exploring both the technical how-to and the deeper human impulse to personalize one's environment. The writing is warm and reflective, blending command-line culture with genuine self-expression.
https://hexaitos.com/
Hex's Den is the personal site of Hexaitos, a self-described shapeshifting creature from Germany who documents their passion for Unix-derived systems, Linux distros like EndeavourOS and Fedora, languages, photography, and obscure music. The site includes sections for art, writings, a tech area, a button collection, and links to side projects including a bird-of-prey image API and a therianthropy index.
http://tilde.club/~globz
The personal tilde.club page of Gl0bZ, who serves as 'The Dispatcher' for the tilde.club community, managing a 6,000+ user waiting list and directing newcomers to available tildeboxes. The page also introduces Alice, a collaborative creative project where users help a character survive by editing their webpages on the shared Unix system.
http://tilde.club/~imt
A tilde.club personal blog by ~imt, focused on tinkering with public-access Unix systems, self-hosting, and internet infrastructure experiments. Notable projects include club6.nl, the first IPv6-only public access Unix system, and tilde.hol.es, an uptime monitoring dashboard for tildeverse servers.
https://gingeh.neocities.org/
April's personal Neocities site blends her passions for Linux (Mint), the Rust programming language, and the Bevy game engine, with a handful of nifty technical pages like palette mapping and readable colour generation. A trans girl self-described as a big nerd, she has a to-do list hinting at upcoming writeups on her Bevy Jam entry and colour-space transformations, making this a cozy corner of the web for fellow programming enthusiasts.
https://tilde.club/~mlot
A tilde.club user page for mlot, featuring links to various protocols including Gemini, Gopher, and finger, along with personal repos on Tildeforge and a Smolnet Portal for exploring the small web. The page reflects the spirit of the indie/smol web community, with connections to emergency info projects and the tilde community ecosystem.
https://tilde.club/~lafe
Lafe's tilde.club homepage covers their journey switching from Windows to Arch Linux, including guides on using the Pan Usenet reader and experimenting with twtxt and the smol web. The site has a refreshingly honest, work-in-progress feel with pages on Arch Linux setup, static site generators like Eleventy, and Gemini/Gopher exploration.