Programming
535 sites
https://backdrifting.net/
Milo Trujillo's personal blog sits at the crossroads of computer science, social systems, and hacking, with deep technical posts covering machine learning, network science, and decentralized organizing. The site reflects the work of a researcher and activist who writes with academic rigor but for a general hacker audience, and is even accessible via a Tor hidden service.
http://danluu.com/
Dan Luu's technical blog covers software engineering, systems performance, computer architecture, and the tech industry with a sharp analytical lens. Posts range from deep dives into cache incidents and latency pitfalls to broader essays on hiring, productivity, and organizational culture.
https://byemc.xyz/
Byespace is the personal corner of a developer named bye, featuring a blog, a showcase of small software projects like a C# PlayStation metadata library and a browser-picker utility for Windows, and a live music listening widget powered by ListenBrainz. The site has a cozy old-web aesthetic complete with 88x31 buttons and a changelog, making it a charming blend of indie dev work and personal expression.
https://terabytetiger.com/
Tyler VanBlargan's personal site showcases his projects, blog, and bookmarks as a developer and tinkerer with eclectic interests spanning laser engraving, Raspberry Pi self-hosting, Pico-8, and vinyl records. Built with 11ty, the site offers a clean hub for exploring Tyler's technical experiments and writing.
https://mousetail.nl/
Maurits van Riezen, a software developer known as Mousetail, showcases his projects including a competitive code-golf platform, a Pygame game, a Catan tournament bot with over 1,200 ranked players, and various web tools. The site also features technical articles on concurrency models and game development, plus participation in several webrings.
https://superneutron.neocities.org/
Superneutron's cozy Neocities corner highlights their interests in programming, drawing, and anime, with dedicated sections for artwork and coding projects. The site participates in several webrings including NoJS, Hotline, and Yesterweb, making it a small but connected node in the old-web revival community.
https://lovirent.eu/
Lovis Rentsch's personal homepage showcasing his passion for FOSS, Rust, NixOS, and esoteric array programming languages like uiua and Haskell. The site itself is built with Rust and WebAssembly and doubles as a playground for browser experiments, featuring a project portfolio, guestbook, and a blog in both English and German.
https://bugwhisperer.dev/
Andie Keller's personal corner of the small web blends technical blog posts about Linux, AI speech-to-text tools, and molecular dynamics research with a philosophy of minimal, accessible, tracker-free web design. Recent posts range from building local AI solutions on Wayland Linux to exploring protein simulation, making this a thoughtful mix of software engineering and scientific curiosity.
https://piet.me/
Piet van Zoen is a software developer based in Portland, Oregon who shares notes on programming topics like TDD, Git organization, Copilot setup, and his IndieWeb tech stack. The site blends technical writing with personal interests including sci-fi book recommendations, field recording, and Raspberry Pi tinkering.
http://curt.com/
Curt's personal homepage doubles as a professional showcase for his 31-plus years of experience as a Pick Operating System specialist and consultant, listing real-world clients across industries from HVAC to contact lens manufacturing. Visitors also find links to his photographs, philosophy of life, and a quirky disambiguation section connecting to other people named Curt around the web.