Running on an 8MHz Mac Plus.
Web client, telnet, actual dialup (1-312-654-0090).
Bookmark links, take simple notes and store images and pdfs. Automatically tags your bookmarks using AI for faster retrieval. Automatically fetches title, description and images for links. Automatically archives what you add. Sort your bookmarks into lists for better organization. Search through all your bookmarks using full text search. SSO support.
Available for iOS and Android. Addons for Chrome and Firefox.
All AI/LLM functionality is local. No external services are used.
The Polaric Server is mainly a web based service to present live tracking information (APRS, AIS, etc) on maps and where the information is updated in realtime. It is originally targeted for use by radio amateurs in voluntary search and rescue service in Norway. It consists of a web application and a server program (APRS daemon). It runs on e.g. aprs.no as a online service on the internet, but we could also bring it with us out in the field in a portable computer, possibly with its own LAN, APRS modems and radios. A goal is that it should be able to work without always being online with a good connection to the internet.
Github: https://github.com/orgs/PolaricServer/repositories
Lots of Java, unfortunately.
A super-simple, super lightweight CMS that can be used to build a website, a blog, a personal wiki, or lots of other things. Has a robust library of extensions.
Edit your website in a web browser. Log in with your user account. You can use the normal navigation, make some changes and see the result immediately. It is a great way to update your website. No database, no admin panel. Datenstrom Yellow doesn't get in your way. Edit your website in a text editor. Create small web pages, wikis and blogs. You can use your favorite text editor and change everything on your computer. This is convenient for developers, designers and translators. Download one file, unzip it and copy everything to your web server. Your website is immediately available. The most important things are included. There are extensions with additional features, languages and themes that you can install.
Eric A. Meyer has been working with the web since late 1993 and is an internationally recognized expert on the subjects of HTML, CSS, and web standards. A widely read author, he was technical lead at Rebecca’s Gift, a 501(c)(3) non-profit organization dedicated to providing healing family vacations after the death of a child; and was, along with Jeffrey Zeldman, co-founder of the web conference series An Event Apart (2005–2021).
RSS: https://meyerweb.com/eric/thoughts/feed/
ATOM: https://meyerweb.com/eric/thoughts/feed/atom/
zFRAG is a little Zen Game in which you can manually defrag a virtual Hard Disk. You can also turn on the AutoDefrag and sit back and watch. Developed in Unity, the game is available on itch.io.
Runs on 32-bit and 64-bit Windows, OSX, and Linux.
A plugin for Shaarli to add a "Go to top" button on the footer.
Clone into your shaarli-install/plugins/ subdirectory.
This script will generate folders for each book, chapter, and page of a Bookstack install and writes them out as PDFs or HTML pages.
If you would export attachments from pages to, this script has to run on the same host as bookstackapp-wiki, because it reads files from the webservers docroot upload directory.
Alexandria.org is a non-profit, ad-free search engine. Our goal is to provide the best available information without compromise. The index is built on data from Common Crawl and the engine is written in C++. The source code is available. We are still at an early stage of development and running the search engine on a shoestring budget.
Github:
In theory you can set up your own instance. In practice, I don't know how practical that would be.
Silverstripe CMS is the intuitive content management system and flexible framework loved by editors and developers alike. Tries to be easy to use. Aims for stability, security, and excellent support. Tries to generate highly reusable code with a built-in templating engine.
Installs with Composer.
Github: https://github.com/silverstripe
Our toolkit includes satellite and mapping services, tools for verifying photos and videos, websites to archive web pages, and much more. Most of the tools that we include can be used for free. Bellingcat’s Online Investigation Toolkit has a long tradition but our newest version is special: It is offered in collaboration with the Bellingcat volunteer community.
You can also download the tool lists for each category in csv format, or the whole site as a PDF.
This is the official California state government website for making sure that you're still registered to vote. It needs your name, birthday, and driver's license and Social Security number.
Technically, it's /either/ your driver's license /or/ your SSN, but if you enter one you'll have to check "I do not have one" box for the other and that might cause erroneous results. Your tax dollars at work.
Library for embedding inline assembly directly inside bash. This is sheer madness - it injects machine code (assembled assembly language) directly into /proc/$$/mem
for execution. Currently only supports x86-64.
A super-tiny Activitypub semi compliant microblogging platform, written entirely in bash. Requires netcat to provide network connectivity, openssl, jq, and curl. No front-end, no client-to-server. Everything is manual.
I'm not sure what you'd call this; there's no actual server, there's no API...
Life is hard. Some days are at the absolute limit of what we can manage. Some days are worse than that. Eating—picking a meal, making it, putting it into your facehole—can feel like an insurmountable challenge. We wrote this cookbook to share our coping strategies. It has recipes to make when you’ve worked a 16-hour day, when you can’t stop crying and you don’t know why, when you accidentally woke up an Eldritch abomination at the bottom of the ocean. But most of all, this cookbook exists to help Sad Bastards like us feel a little less alone at mealtimes.
The Sad Bastard Cookbook is funny, realistic, and kind. It’s vegetarian/vegan. It’s a community-built project. And the e-book is free. It’s hard to survive late capitalism and we want to help.
Subscribe to the newsletter, download the free pdf, and print it. We’re cool with that. We made it legal with Creative Commons (4.0-BY-NC), but if you get a thrill from breaking the law, you can pretend it’s not.
A dongle that plugs into a Centronic 50 SCSI port. You plug a microSD card into it and it shows up as a SCSI drive. Some models have a wifi interface on board, too.
A site that helps you study for ham radio licensing. Looks like an interactive site that you have to create an account for so you can track your progress.
An open-source, 35mm full-frame (36mm x 24mm) CCD mirror-less interchangable lens camera (MILC). The original goal of this project was to create a digital camera back to convert SLR cameras to DSLR cameras, but has since changed to build a full MILC.
This means that the project includes building a logic board with a system-on-a-chip, optical and ranging sensors, ports, storage media, an LCD screen... this is not a beginner's project. Nor is it a project for casual photographers.