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15 KiB
| layout | lang | title | description |
|---|---|---|---|
| post | en | lost+found | Unsorted pile of links I sometimes urgently need in the middle of a conversation. |
lost+found
Unsorted pile of links I sometimes urgently need in the middle of a conversation.
Some file systems contain a special directory, called lost+found under Unix, where a file system check places lost and potentially corrupted files when the correct location cannot be determined, and so requires manual intervention by the user.
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Index of Aesthetics An impressive library of visual styles that are usually hard to name. -
Human Progress A collection of positive human statistics and optimistic charts. -
No Vehicles in the Park A short game that illustrates how one rule can mean different things to different people. -
Dead Drops A global network of anonymous, cemented USB drives for offline file sharing. -
FreeSewing Like GitHub, but for clothes. -
EndOfLife.date End-of-life (EOL) and support information is often hard to track, or very badly presented. -
Atlas Obscura A comprehensive database of the world’s most wondrous places and foods. -
Learn X in Y minutes A fast-paced intro to a new programming language or tool. -
Ithkuil An experimental constructed language designed to express more profound levels of human cognition briefly and clearly. -
Xah Keyboard Guide Keyboards, input devices, shortcuts, typing habits, and the ergonomics behind it all.
See the list of Do-It-Yourself Keyboards. -
Our World In Data An overview of global data and long-term trends. -
Well-Kept Gardens Die By Pacifism Good online communities die primarily by refusing to defend themselves.
Also available in Russian. -
Articles by Bartosz Ciechanowski Interactive articles about physics, math, and engineering. It’s probably the best website on the entire internet.
My favorite post is the one about bicycles. -
The Cursed Computer Iceberg Meme An endless hall of shame and weirdness of computers. -
The Evolution of Trust A briliant interactive guide to the game theory of why and how we trust each other.
The rest of this site is also pretty good. -
I Know What You Download Torrenting can leave traces.
Check torrent downloads and distributions for your own or your neighbor’s IP address. -
Retries Requests over the network can fail.
An interactive study of common retry methods for developers. -
No Tabs in IntelliJ IDEA “There are many ways to navigate a project inside IntelliJ IDEA (or any other editor) that doesn’t necessarily include having to look through a list of tabs and figure out where you have to click next.”
Post from the VP of Program Management at JetBrains. -
An Interface Designed for Touch Typists If you think VIM is insane, you should definitely read about WordStar, which is still quite popular among many fiction writers. -
Ask HN: Programmers who don’t use autocomplete/LSP, how do you do it? Different opinions on writing code without using overcomplicatedadvanced tools. -
Your Computer Isn’t Yours An investigation into one of the many reasons why no one should use products from Apple. -
Yr from NRK and Meteorologisk Institutt A weather forecast site with a no-nonsense interface.
Direct links: Belgrade, Istanbul and Yekaterinburg. -
Hoodmaps A crowdsourced map to navigate cities using marked areas and user-generated tags. -
ShadeMap This service calculates shadows from mountains, buildings, and trees for any date and time, and displays them on a map. -
Cost of Living Comparison A comparison tool lets you compare the affordability of two cities side-by-side. -
The World Factbook A massive CIA database on almost every country in the world.
Handy when you need to check what kind of power outlets a country uses before you get there. -
Rules for Writing Software Tutorials Most software tutorials suck. Here’s how to make one that doesn’t. -
Pangram A sentence using every letter of a given alphabet at least once.
An additional list in Russian and other languages. -
about:translations Firefox has a built-in translator. Not so smart, but works offline. -
No Config for Old Men A rant about how modern software won’t let you customize it anymore. -
Webcompat.com Bug reporting for the web.
If a site breaks in one browser but not another, it’s a web compatibility bug. Report it. -
JSFuck An esoteric and educational programming style based on the atomic parts of JavaScript.
It uses only six different characters to write and execute code. -
Smuggling arbitrary data through an emoji Unicode is broken. You can encode data in any unicode character. -
Common Mythconceptions A list of the world’s biggest myths and misconceptions — with myth-busting included. -
A Mathematician’s Lament — by Paul Lockhart A passionate critique of how math is taught and a vision of how beautiful it could be instead.
Also available in Russian.