Going Offline by Jeremy Keith
Bookmarks
nostr - Notes and Other Stuff Transmitted by Relays
Nyxt browser: The hacker's browser
You Are What You Read, Even If You Don’t Always Remember It
Nutshell: make expandable, embeddable explanations
A bare-minimum ActivityPub server from scratch
Why you shouldn't trust Discord - cadence's weblog (personal blog)
I refuse to be a slave to The Algorithm - Coding with Jesse
The Art of Not Sharing
If Not React, Then What? - Infrequently Noted
Building a robust frontend using progressive enhancement - Service Manual - GOV.UK
Embrace Slowness
Why pipes sometimes get "stuck": buffering
The Forest
Discover the IndieWeb, one blog post at a time.
The IDEs we had 30 years ago... and we lost
A case for modern IDEs adding some nice features that we didn't have back when everything was TUIs, but also several hundred megabytes of who-knows-what. A perspective on the popular TUI editors and IDEs today, such as Neovim and Emacs, powerful but not as easy to use as some from the DOS land, latter of which could handle some powerful IDE features just as well.
Willow
Laurence Tratt: Structured Editing and Incremental Parsing
slcl
What is a feed? (a.k.a. RSS)
Netigen: Publish Once, Syndicate Nowhere
LOW←TECH MAGAZINE
How to converse online – Manu
Mastodon's Mastodon'ts
onlyknownothing | Escaping the Algorithm: Alternative News Aggregators and "In Brief" Information
Unsolicited blogging advice – Manu
People and Blogs
Eastgate: web shrines
The emergence of Web shrines -- home pages dedicated to the memory of friends or ancestors -- is unexpected, unheralded, and remarkable. Web shrines are among the clearest signs that the Web is neither purely a commercial nor a transitory phenomenon.
About - Small Technology Foundation
The Yesterweb - Reclaiming the Internet