Programming
535 sites
https://alexwlchan.net/
Alex Chan's personal site blends technical writing with creative and personal reflections, covering software development, digital preservation, Python, Git, and accessibility. Recent articles include a custom static site generator, webcam toy apps, and parody movie posters, making it a rich mix of code-focused tutorials and playful projects.
https://xml-dev.com/
A curated directory of XML editors, listing both commercial and open-source options including well-known tools like XMLSpy, JEdit, and Stylus Studio. The site organizes editors into standard and WYSIWYG categories, making it a handy reference for developers searching for the right XML editing tool.
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://marlena.ruhr/
Marlena Müller is a computer science student at Ruhr-Universität Bochum whose personal site covers her academic work, theoretical computer science interests, and student advocacy activities. The site includes a CV, blog, publications, and press mentions highlighting her involvement in debates around digital sovereignty and university labor conditions.
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://hci.stanford.edu/research/dtools
The d.tools project from Stanford's HCI group is a hardware and software system designed to help designers rapidly prototype physical user interfaces, combining tangible controllers, sensors, and output devices with a visual authoring environment. Built as an Eclipse plugin and backed by fieldwork at Bay Area design studios, it bridges the gap between physical form prototyping and interactive behavior modeling in a single integrated workflow.
https://andremichelle.io/lab
André Michelle's Flash Laboratory Archive preserves a collection of Flash-based interactive experiments and creative works from the classic web era. Visitors can browse through the archived pieces using a simple gallery interface, getting a glimpse into the experimental Flash artistry that defined early web creativity.
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.
http://scripting.com/
Scripting News is Dave Winer's long-running blog covering technology, software development, AI tools, and web infrastructure, widely considered one of the oldest blogs on the internet. Daily posts blend hands-on coding notes about projects like Node.js apps and Claude Code experiments with sharp commentary on tech industry trends and politics.
https://brandonrohrer.com/
Brandon Rohrer's personal technical site hosts two in-progress book projects covering DIY networking (web servers, SSH, HTTP clients in Python) and applied robotics with machine learning. The depth of content is impressive, spanning dozens of chapters on practical programming, reinforcement learning, signal processing, and software engineering.