Programming
535 sites
https://astrid.tech/
Astrid's personal tech site blends a blog, project showcase, and homelab diary with posts covering NixOS, IPv6 networking, Ansible, ham radio, and building a static site generator in Rust. The site radiates genuine hacker curiosity, complete with a swear counter, webring memberships, and a collection of custom 88x31 buttons.
https://chris-besch.com/
Christopher Besch is a developer and photographer who shares articles on software topics like Go, Rust, Linux, and Docker alongside personal software projects and conference talks. The site blends technical writing with photography and showcases hands-on work including a KiCad firmware generator, a self-hosted Forgejo forge, and a Rust graph search library.
https://notes.billmill.org/
Bill Mill's personal notes site is a sprawling Obsidian-generated knowledge base covering programming, AI tools, data visualization, computer usage tips, and more. With nearly 3000 links spanning topics from Rust and Go to CLI tools and interactive explainers, it reads like a working developer's externalized brain made public.
https://tilde.club/~whitcomb
Tom's Tilde Club page showcases an implementation of Conway's Game of Life powered by Guile Scheme, displaying classic cellular automaton patterns like Glider, DieHard, Blinker, Penta-Decathlon, and Acorn. Visitors can adjust the generation counter in the URL to watch the simulations evolve step by step, making it a neat interactive programming demonstration.
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://h3rald.com/
Fabio Cevasco's personal site showcases his open source programming projects, most built with the Nim language, including minimalist concatenative languages like 'min' and 'hex' and a lightweight NoSQL store called LiteStore. The site also features a 'grimoire' of command-line recipes and a back-catalog of tech articles from its active blog era in the early 2000s.
https://worldwidemart.com/scripts
A fan archive preserving classic CGI scripts from the early web era, offering modern and secure implementations of beloved 1990s tools like FormMail, WWWBoard, and Guestbook in Perl, PHP, and JavaScript. With 20+ scripts, 60+ FAQ pages, and working examples, it serves as both a nostalgic reference and a practical resource for web developers.
https://ake.neocities.org/
Ake's corner is a personal programming hub packed with JavaScript experiments, small games, and projects ranging from a diff tool to a retro-styled entertainment system. Visitors can explore a demolab of random sketches, a wiki-like knowledge base, web design experiments, and tech notes, making it a surprisingly layered creative coding space.
https://drwho.virtadpt.net/
The personal blog of 'The Doctor' (handle 412/724), a technologist with a skeptical eye toward LLMs, a passion for cyberpunk literature, and a wide range of geek-culture interests ranging from security tools to the Fediverse. With over 210 pages of posts tagged across infrastructure, programming, fandom, and culture, this is a deeply personal and intellectually eclectic corner of the web built with Pelican and a brutalist aesthetic.
https://bobrubbens.nl/
Bob Rubbens is a PhD researcher who writes about programming, tools, and computer science topics ranging from LaTeX quirks and markdown workflows to Java exception systems and genetic programming experiments. The blog is a mix of practical technical tips, academic musings, and the occasional AI skepticism roundup, making it a rich resource for developers and researchers alike.