Programming
513 sites
https://denizk0461.dev/
Deniz, a Northern German student and developer, shares their creative and technical world here, covering game development in Godot, 3D modelling in Blender, electronics, Linux self-hosting, and original art. The site features an active devlog for an indie game called Homesick, a blog, a drawings gallery, and downloadable projects, making it a genuinely varied personal developer hub.
https://jasdev.me/
Jasdev Singh's personal blog 'Distillations' blends deep technical writing about Swift, functional programming, and reactive publishers with a prolific film photography archive spanning over 250 rolls. The technical posts dive into advanced topics like type erasure, contravariance, and monoidal applicatives, making it a rich resource for engineers interested in functional and reactive programming concepts.
https://holly.mlem.systems/
Holly's personal corner of the internet features a minimalist homepage linking to her blog, code forges, and social profiles across the fediverse and Bluesky. The site hints at a tech-oriented personality with references to Lisp, multiple git repositories, and a fondness for foxes.
https://zanneth.com/
Zanneth is the personal blog and project showcase of Charles Magahern, a software engineer who writes about topics ranging from reverse engineering arcade hardware and USB hacking to book reviews and technology commentary. The site blends deep technical dives, such as dissecting KONAMI arcade disk images and PS-X EXE file formats, with thoughtful essays on internet privacy and linguistics.
https://q.pfiffer.org/
Quinlan Pfiffer's personal site blends programming projects, outdoor adventures, and eclectic writing under the banner 'Malevolent Cartography.' Notable projects include OlegDB, a transactional datastore, a C micro web-framework called 38-Moths, and a Google SparseHash reimplementation, alongside blog posts about packrafting, skiing, and car living.
https://teropa.info/blog/2016/07/28/javascript-systems-music
Tero Parviainen's in-depth tutorial guides readers through recreating landmark minimal and ambient music works by Steve Reich and Brian Eno using the Web Audio API and JavaScript. The guide walks through building phase music and generative loop systems step by step, making it a rich resource for developers curious about audio programming and algorithmic composition.
https://rutteric.com/
David Rutter, known online as Quintopia, shares a wide-ranging collection of personal projects including software, esolangs, magic tricks, and long-distance hiking blogs. The site serves as a portal to years of creative work spanning programming experiments, writing, and outdoor adventures, with a to-do list hinting at many ambitious projects in progress.
https://sadly.link/
sadlyLink's Café is a terminal-styled personal blog covering coding, philosophy, writing, and everyday life musings. The site greets visitors with a command-line interface aesthetic and promises content spanning programming projects to deeper reflective topics.
http://sdomi.pl/
Dominique (domi/sdomi) is a queer enby hacker and self-described Bash witch who builds impressively cursed projects, including a Minecraft server and a web framework both written entirely in Bash. The site showcases reverse engineering, networking, electronics, osdev, and retrocomputing interests alongside a weblog and a collection of wild shell-scripting experiments.
https://jackdonnell.com/articles/SQL_CURSOR.htm
A concise technical reference page by Jack Donnell covering T-SQL cursor syntax with a practical example for database developers. The page focuses specifically on how to declare and use cursors in Transact-SQL, making it a quick reference for SQL Server programmers.