Blog of the .Day: Explore the (indie) web, one blog at a time.
Every day, Blog of the .Day highlights a new blog. The blog is chosen at random and a new one should be deployed daily via Netlify. Joe Crawford became steward of this project in May
no-JS.club | Promenade for JavaScript freed websites
he no-JS Club
The no-js.club is up again! Now maintained by shruub, but not much changed otherwise!
This project was inspired by websites like the 250KB club, the 512KB club, the 1MB club and the former noJS club.
Smooth Sailing Listings is a web directory or listing for websites under any of the following categories:
Blogs
Cliques/Webrings
Collectives/Networks
Directories/Listings
Fanlistings
Fansites/Shrines
Graphics/Resources
Hosting
Message Boards/Forums
Personal
Pixel Art
Portfolios
Role Playing Games
Trading Card Games
Writings
The web directory has been open since January 28, 2004 and is a place for all kinds of sites to be listed in various categories. If you would like to submit your site to the directory, read over the rules, grab yourself a button/code and add your website!
This is a free web directory, you do not have to pay to be added. Join the directory and begin gaining more traffic to your website. Please be sure to read the rules before submitting, so there is no surprise if you do not see your website listed.
This is an open directory of personal sites and blogs, maintained entirely on GitHub.
This project was created by Den Delimarsky in an effort to bring attention to little 🌱 digital gardens and ✨ personal corners of the internet that people maintain outside the "Big Tech" walled gardens.
This is a directory of websites that primarily stick with simple, marked up, hyperlinked text. I appreciate these sites because they load quickly, scroll smoothly, spare my battery, are more compact, and lack the usual nonsense that infects many websites.
The modern web is literally Satan and will probably eat your first-born child if we don't do anything about it, and quick! (had to increase the hyperbolism from the other websites; interestingly, the NoJS Club, which until now has arguably been the most radical of *.clubs, does not have much hyperbole, which really is a shame