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Achmed Jones
Oct 16, 2004



Dijkstracula posted:

https://cr.yp.to/djb.html

djb is a cryptographer who has written a lot of things about the sort of data structures, numerical computation, safe programming in the UNIX environment, etc, things that you'd expect a cryptographer to care about

seconding this. and in this vein:

cryptopals.com

is great for teaching the fundamentals of cryptography by walking you through breaking various algorithms and implementations. it's super fun and also vital to be an actually-good security engineer. despite that, most security engineers' eyes will glaze over as soon as you talk about this stuff, and they will think you're brilliant.

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Armitag3
Mar 15, 2020

Forget it Jake, it's cybertown.


Great contributions people, I've added it all to the dir, thanks!

Mahatma Goonsay
Jun 6, 2007
Yum
https://www.fieggen.com/shoelace/index.htm everything you would ever want to know about shoe lacing and shoe tying.

post hole digger
Mar 21, 2011

Mahatma Goonsay posted:

https://www.fieggen.com/shoelace/index.htm everything you would ever want to know about shoe lacing and shoe tying.

lol this is like a fever dream. incredible.

Dijkstracula
Mar 18, 2003

You can't spell 'vector field' without me, Professor!

Simon Tatham's Portable Puzzle Collection - the author of PuTTY has written a puzzle game library and they are surprisingly fun.

"This page contains a collection of small computer programs which implement one-player puzzle games. All of them run natively on Unix (GTK) and on Windows. They can also be played on the web, as Java or Javascript applets. I wrote this collection because I thought there should be more small desktop toys available: little games you can pop up in a window and play for two or three minutes while you take a break from whatever else you were doing.

net was always my personal favourite

Buck Turgidson
Feb 6, 2011

𓀬𓀠𓀟𓀡𓀢𓀣𓀤𓀥𓀞𓀬

Mahatma Goonsay posted:

https://www.fieggen.com/shoelace/index.htm everything you would ever want to know about shoe lacing and shoe tying.

I ran across this website when I was looking for ways of keeping my hockey skates tight. Actually really useful

HamAdams
Jun 29, 2018

yospos
https://www.nethack.org

Achmed Jones
Oct 16, 2004




YES and also nethack.alt.org, which runs a multi-user server and high score list (and accompanying bones file), adds in some nice quality of life patches, allows spectating, etc. it's fun!

Buck Turgidson
Feb 6, 2011

𓀬𓀠𓀟𓀡𓀢𓀣𓀤𓀥𓀞𓀬


https://www.explainingcomputers.com

AnimeIsTrash
Jun 30, 2018

https://crawl.develz.org/

Armitag3
Mar 15, 2020

Forget it Jake, it's cybertown.


Achmed Jones
Oct 16, 2004



RF line of site calculator: https://www.scadacore.com/tools/rf-path/rf-line-of-sight/

you can tell it where antennas are gonna be, of what height, and it figures out if there's line of sight between the two. useful for telling if you're gonna be able to hit a repeater from a certain place, what kind of mast you'd need, etc

Poopernickel
Oct 28, 2005

electricity bad
Fun Shoe

Achmed Jones posted:

YES and also nethack.alt.org, which runs a multi-user server and high score list (and accompanying bones file), adds in some nice quality of life patches, allows spectating, etc. it's fun!

I play on NAO! My strategy is to pollute the mines with dangerous bones files

One time somebody joined my game as a spectator and then chewed me out over mail scrolls for being a startscummer piece of poo poo.

This did not change my behavior.

NAO rules and it's a great way to kill time while you're waiting for something to compile.

Poopernickel fucked around with this message at 02:04 on Oct 11, 2023

rotor
Jun 11, 2001

classic case of pineapple derangement syndrome

Asleep Style
Oct 20, 2010

the holotypic occlupanid research group
https://www.horg.com/

faxlore
Sep 24, 2014

a blue star tattoo for you!

Sig Id Wiki - https://www.sigidwiki.com/wiki/Signal_Identification_Guide

Dijkstracula
Mar 18, 2003

You can't spell 'vector field' without me, Professor!


this is awesome but it's also weirdly hosed up that some things are just transmitting from somewhere to somebody and nobody knows what they are!!!

quote:

Hi, this noise has recently appeared on top band, 160m and I wondered if anyone has any idea of it's origin. Speculation is that it is over the horizon radar coming from France. Any suggestions would be greatly appreciated since it is destroying a UK net that has been running on 1933 for many years.
feels right in line with a USENET post from A Fire Upon the Deep

mediaphage
Mar 22, 2007

Excuse me, pardon me, sheer perfection coming through

Dijkstracula posted:

this is awesome but it's also weirdly hosed up that some things are just transmitting from somewhere to somebody and nobody knows what they are!!!

feels right in line with a USENET post from A Fire Upon the Deep

nobody meaning people outside of the gubbermint at least

Kazinsal
Dec 13, 2011




russia's air defense systems just blasting enormous amounts of RF across the globe and "accidentally" bouncing it off the ionosphere is one of my favourite RF ghosts

yeah, no worries man, just blasting BRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRNT. *beat* BRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRNT. *beat* BRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRNT. constantly so hard dudes with 100 year old radios in iowa can hear it

Jonny 290
May 5, 2005



[ASK] me about OS/2 Warp
the over the horizon radars are annoying but man back in the 80s, the 'russian woodpecker' was so prevalent and loud that they literally started redesigning ham radios around it. the "noise blanker" on any radio from 75-on is a circuit designed to ignore/null out periodic pulsed interference, exactly like the kind the OTH radars poo poo out

fart simpson
Jul 2, 2005

DEATH TO AMERICA
:xickos:

Jonny 290 posted:

the over the horizon radars are annoying but man back in the 80s, the 'russian woodpecker' was so prevalent and loud that they literally started redesigning ham radios around it. the "noise blanker" on any radio from 75-on is a circuit designed to ignore/null out periodic pulsed interference, exactly like the kind the OTH radars poo poo out

can u use a ham radio to listen to satellites? isnt that how that guy recorded the first sputnik?

Sagebrush
Feb 26, 2012

Jonny post the moonbounce SSTV

edit: wait, no, i guess we should all try to stay on topic and not treat this thread like we normally do, like that handsome devil rotor asked us to. I feel ashamed that I forgot that we were supposed to treat this thread differently.

Somebody fucked around with this message at 03:41 on Oct 20, 2023

Jonny 290
May 5, 2005



[ASK] me about OS/2 Warp

fart simpson posted:

can u use a ham radio to listen to satellites? isnt that how that guy recorded the first sputnik?

that's exactly right, hams tracked sputnik I and specifically measured its doppler shift from enough locations that they all got together and collated data and were able to figure out its orbit before the US government did


Sagebrush posted:

Jonny post the moonbounce SSTV

edit: wait, no, i guess we should all try to stay on topic and not treat this thread like we normally do, like that handsome devil rotor asked us to. I feel ashamed that I forgot that we were supposed to treat this thread differently.

a live web 1.0 page of slow scan tv pages, to circle it back tight

https://www.worldsstv.com/

rotor
Jun 11, 2001

classic case of pineapple derangement syndrome

Jonny 290 posted:


a live web 1.0 page of slow scan tv pages, to circle it back tight

https://www.worldsstv.com/

Leperflesh
May 17, 2007


and then there's numbers stations https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Numbers_station

DELETE CASCADE
Oct 25, 2017

i haven't washed my penis since i jerked it to a phtotograph of george w. bush in 2003
http://www.sanandreasfault.org/ i just discovered this site after the evening's earthquake and i think it's awesome, reminds me of the old web days. i'm surfing the information superhighway

post hole digger
Mar 21, 2011

DELETE CASCADE posted:

http://www.sanandreasfault.org/ i just discovered this site after the evening's earthquake and i think it's awesome, reminds me of the old web days. i'm surfing the information superhighway

oh hell yea

edit: lmao wow was not ready for silly 'THE BIG ONE' with edvard munch painting to take me to photos of dozens of dead bodies :whitewater:

Bloody
Mar 3, 2013

https://www.oneweirdkerneltrick.com/

Buck Turgidson
Feb 6, 2011

𓀬𓀠𓀟𓀡𓀢𓀣𓀤𓀥𓀞𓀬
https://exrx.net/

Every exercise under the sun

Progressive JPEG
Feb 19, 2003

http://textfiles.com/directory.html

rotor
Jun 11, 2001

classic case of pineapple derangement syndrome

Dijkstracula posted:

if ever I was to redo mine, I would remind myself that a web site can just be a bunch of files

Achmed Jones
Oct 16, 2004



i use jekyll for my site, but as a ruby thing it breaks and requires janitoring every thirty seconds. so i am highly disincentivized from making new posts etc.

it's a dead simple site, so migrating it to some other static site generator (including a dumb shell script) wouldn't be hard, but it's also greater than zero effort. which is too much.

Midjack
Dec 24, 2007



keyboard switch reviews, including force curves: https://www.theremingoat.com/

Silver Alicorn
Mar 30, 2008

𝓪 𝓻𝓮𝓭 𝓹𝓪𝓷𝓭𝓪 𝓲𝓼 𝓪 𝓬𝓾𝓻𝓲𝓸𝓾𝓼 𝓼𝓸𝓻𝓽 𝓸𝓯 𝓬𝓻𝓮𝓪𝓽𝓾𝓻𝓮
Omniglot is still around and looks just like it did in 2004: https://omniglot.com/

Internet Old One
Dec 6, 2021

Coke Adds Life
So I just randomly found this site full of 90s copypasta thats barely changed since 1998
https://www.netscrap.com/netscrap.cfm
Curiously it doesn’t look like it’s had any activity in decades except a very recent post in “messages” about 10x engineers.

Dijkstracula
Mar 18, 2003

You can't spell 'vector field' without me, Professor!

Golfshrine Online - for all your computer golf game needs

Fortaleza
Feb 21, 2008

Eli Bendersky's blog has been going for 20 years now

https://eli.thegreenplace.net/archives/all

Haven't read it in quite a while since I don't program these days but he's got a series on concurrent servers in C I enjoyed back in the day

https://eli.thegreenplace.net/2017/concurrent-servers-part-1-introduction/

Leperflesh
May 17, 2007

What's That Bug is a web site for helping to identify bugs. You can browse of course but you can also take a picture of your bug, alive or smashed on your windscreen etc., and they will probably identify it for you. You send it to them with an email and the photos as attachments.

post hole digger
Mar 21, 2011

Leperflesh posted:

What's That Bug is a web site for helping to identify bugs. You can browse of course but you can also take a picture of your bug, alive or smashed on your windscreen etc., and they will probably identify it for you. You send it to them with an email and the photos as attachments.

lmao at the 'nasty emails from readers' section. i remember when so many more sites had sections like that

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Deep Dish Fuckfest
Sep 6, 2006

Advanced
Computer Touching


Toilet Rascal
small thing and not web 1.0 but useful when you need need to find the right curve to animate something: https://easings.net/

you can click on each one to see the implementation and how it looks in action for scaling, movement, and transparency

also this owns:

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