Software
290 sites
https://someonewhocares.org/hosts
Dan Pollock's well-known hosts file resource offers a regularly updated blocklist that prevents computers from connecting to ad servers, spyware domains, and tracking sites. A practical and long-running community project, it supports multiple formats including IPv6 and legacy Mac systems, with contributions credited from dozens of users worldwide.
https://neocitiestools.neocities.org/
Neocities Tools, created by Patrick G, offers a suite of command-line utilities for managing Neocities websites, including tools to copy, delete, list, and batch-upload files via shell scripts and Windows executables. The collection covers both Windows and Linux platforms, making it a practical resource for developers who prefer working outside the browser-based Neocities interface.
https://joelb.xyz/
Joel Berg's personal website serves as a hub for his eclectic online presence, featuring a blog, photo gallery, media reviews, and articles covering topics like automation tools and app integrations. The site includes a separate sound work section, hidden pages to discover, Tor accessibility, and a quirky anti-spam footer that gives it a distinctly handcrafted web personality.
https://mynoise.net/noiseMachines.php
myNoise by Dr. Ir. S. Pigeon is an extensive online library of customizable background noise machines and interactive soundscapes, covering everything from distant thunder and Japanese gardens to medieval libraries and Irish coastlines. Designed to aid sleep, mask tinnitus, improve focus, and provide sound therapy, it stands out for its calibrated audio generators and regularly updated collection of immersive environments.
http://zackmdavis.net/blog
Zack M. Davis writes deeply analytical posts on AI alignment, machine learning, rationalism, and related technical philosophy on this long-running personal blog. The content is intellectually demanding and wide-ranging, touching on topics like Claude's model spec, selection effects, and the mathematical foundations of intelligence.
https://mail.jjakke.com/
Jake runs his own personal email server on a budget VPS and uses this page to explain why he won't be offering accounts to anyone else, with candid commentary on privacy, law enforcement subpoenas, and the limitations of cloud hosting. The page is a refreshingly honest and humorous look at self-hosted email infrastructure, touching on rDNS, VPS trade-offs, and the surveillance risks of third-party hosting.
https://neatnik.net/
Adam Newbold's personal hub at neatnik.net showcases his portfolio of internet projects, including omg.lol, a web directory called URL Town, a PHP learning resource, and a DNS hosting service. Running since 2001, the site serves as a launchpad for a constellation of small-web tools and services built by this prolific indie developer.
https://wrywerytwreywery.stupid.pizza/
The blog of wrywerytwreywery covers a wide mix of technical and philosophical topics including Python scripting, free software advocacy, cyberpunk culture, and theology, alongside experimental poetry pages that literally decay with each view. Posts are tagged by length and subject, making it easy to browse a thoughtful, idiosyncratic feed that blends hacking culture with creative writing and personal reflection.
http://driesdepoorter.be/subtwitter
Subtwitter is a quirky tool created by Belgian artist Dries Depoorter that replaces movie subtitle files with real tweets of similar content, turning any film into a surreal social-media-narrated experience. Visitors can download the beta program, browse example screenshots, and see exactly how the .srt file replacement process works.
https://tilde.club/~klvebunc
Klve Bunc's tilde.club page documents a scattered but charming day in the life of a developer, including a real-time experiment trying to set up a Jitsi coworking stream while fixing Tesla OAuth issues. The site also features reflective writing on Linux ricing culture, fake nostalgia, and the strange pull of the old web aesthetic.