Programming
515 sites
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://arne.me/
Arne Bahlo is a developer based in Germany who shares his work, reading list, and projects on this clean personal homepage. The site links to a blog, a library of books he has read, and recent projects like building a NAS, offering a glimpse into the life of a working software engineer.
https://recurse.greg.technology/
Greg's journal from a September-December 2023 batch at the Recurse Center documents a prolific sprint of side projects ranging from a Django starter kit and voice-AI demos to a restaurant memorial site and an interactive hub dashboard. The site doubles as a portfolio and blog, capturing the experimental, playful energy of a programmer pushing into new territory with tools like GitHub Actions, OCR, and speech recognition.
https://lx862.com/
AmberFrost's personal homepage showcases her programming projects including Minecraft Transit Railway tools and packwiz, along with her PC setup running Arch Linux and Windows. The site is a tidy, lightweight personal hub with a blog, guestbook, and participation in several webrings like Fediring and Retronaut.
https://keleshev.com/compiling-to-assembly-from-scratch
Vladimir Keleshev's book 'Compiling to Assembly from Scratch' walks readers through building a real compiler from source code all the way down to ARM 32-bit assembly, using a TypeScript subset as the implementation language. Covering topics from parsing and abstract syntax trees to type checking, garbage collection, and heap allocation, it is available both as a free online read and a 207-page hardcover print edition.
https://pufikas.nekoweb.org/
Pufikas is the personal homepage of a Lithuanian developer who loves JavaScript, VSCodium, and open-source tools, showcasing highlighted projects like a Pokédex built with VueJS, a self-driving car neural network visualizer, and a GitHub deployment script. The site features a charming old-web aesthetic with customizable themes, scanlines, cursor effects, and a Last.fm widget, making it a delightful peek into a hobbyist coder's world.
https://redcatho.de/
Max, known online as redcathode, runs this personal site showcasing their work as a programmer and electronics hobbyist during a gap year after high school. Visitors can browse past projects and current research interests, along with multiple contact options including Matrix, XMPP, and Signal.
https://denisdefreyne.com/
Denis Defreyne is a software engineer known for creating Nanoc, a Ruby-based static-site generator, who also shares weekly reflections, articles, and a portfolio of his work. The site offers a window into his career spanning SoundCloud, Shopify, and BCG Digital Ventures, alongside his side interests in game development, fiction writing, and photography.
https://hmd-tld.xyz/
Hamed Toledo's personal homepage introduces the Spanish-speaking developer and links to his projects hosted on Codeberg, suggesting a focus on open-source software work. The site is minimal but serves as a hub for anyone wanting to learn about Hamed, support his work, or get in touch.
https://nickcharlton.net/
Nick Charlton is a London-based software developer at thoughtbot who shares technical write-ups covering Linux, Raspberry Pi, Kubernetes, Docker, and software tooling. The articles lean toward practical, hands-on guides that reflect real problems solved in professional and personal projects.