Programming
513 sites
https://danielrotter.at/
Daniel Rotter is an Austrian senior full-stack developer who writes technical blog posts covering PHP, JavaScript, Git, Linux CLI, testing practices, and tools like Neovim and Kubernetes. The site offers a steady stream of practical, opinionated posts aimed at working developers who want to sharpen their craft.
https://hawksey.info/blog/2013/03/lak13-recipes-in-capturing-and-analyzing-data-google-groups-dashboard-using-yahoo-pipes-no-code
Martin Hawksey's technical blog covers data analytics, Google Sheets automation, and tools like Yahoo Pipes for capturing and processing online data without writing code. This particular post walks through building a Google Groups activity dashboard using RSS feeds and pipe manipulation, making it a useful resource for learning analytics enthusiasts and no-code data wranglers.
https://nialltl.neocities.org/
Niall T.L.'s minimal personal site hosts a technical article about the Material Point Method (MPM), a real-time simulation technique for physical materials written in 2019. The site is sparse but focused, offering both written explanation and implementation notes for this niche computational physics topic.
https://akavel.com/
Akavel's digital garden is a personal knowledge base mixing programming notes, Nix/NixOS tips, embedded systems experiments, and hobbyist interests like tabletop RPGs and LEGO. Posts are organized by maturity using a seedling-to-ripe metaphor, making it a thoughtfully tended collection of technical and creative ideas.
https://sommarskog.se/dynamic_sql.html
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.
http://neoformix.com/Projects/TwitArcs/TwitArcs.html
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.
https://bneil.me/
Ben Neil's personal corner of the internet blends a prolific blogging challenge (50 posts in 50 days) with a programmer's perspective on coding, infrastructure, Rust, Go, WASM, and IndieWeb technologies. Alongside the technical content, Ben shares personal reflections, book reviews, and life musings, making it a well-rounded and genuinely readable developer's site.
https://davideaversa.it/
Davide Aversa's personal blog covers software development, artificial intelligence, and tech commentary with a thoughtful, opinionated voice. Alongside the technical writing, he shares monthly changelog posts mixing book reviews, film thoughts, and glimpses of everyday life in Italy.
https://dotcomboom.somnolescent.net/
Eric, known online as dotcomboom or dcb, is a Minnesota-based programmer and artist whose personal site serves as a hub for his many projects, including software tools, an MP3.com preservation archive, and a playlist generator. The site has an unmistakable old-web charm with themed jukeboxes, a guestbook, and links to his various creative outlets across the internet.
https://kibty.town/
Eva's personal site showcases her work as a developer and hobbyist pentester with a focus on infosec, devops, and open-source software projects. Visitors can explore her public GitHub projects including a Minecraft server scanner, a RuneScape mod loader, and a Discord client modification called Moonlight.