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Freelance journalist, editor, and I enjoy experimenting on the web. But, above all, I am human.
Hello, I'm Vito Sartori. 30-something Sr. Staff Software Engineer @ Gympass I solve problems and build tools for other engineers using C, Ruby, Go, Objective-C, Clojure, and Rust. On my spare time I like to fiddle with compilers, protocols, electronics, and weird low-level things; sometimes I remember to post something here.
Hi, I'm a lead platform engineer, runner and minimalist based in The Netherlands. I'm building highly scalable, high performance infrastructure on top of AWS. I try to break free from the silo's of development and operations. I love keeping things simple.
A personal blog mostly about tech and some of the frustrations with it, but there is some technical goodies.
Este es mi sitio personal y profesional, donde publico mis actividades, experimentos y servicios que he ido desarrollando durante mi crecimiento profesional.
The unsupported use case of Bix Frankonis’ disordered, surplus, mediocre midlife in St. Johns, Oregon.
Hi, I’m Tom. Right now I’m building Val Town, a tool for joyful programming, and working on Placemark, a tool for creating maps.
I’m a sourcing and supply chain manager from Austin, Texas. Off the clock you'll find me cooking (mostly plants), reading (almost anything), training (weekdays, weekends sometimes), and generally trying to be good.
Hi! My name is Alex Riviere. I’m a web developer from Atlanta, GA that specializes in Vue.js, python, and PHP.
Since late 2021, I’ve done daily drawings in my iPhone’s Notes app, sharing them to social media under the hashtag #notesArt. In many ways, my #notesArt work is a project uniquely shaped to the contours of my life: a product of the iPhone Era’s pervasive convenience, extended to drawing. I live in an apartment and work a regular job, so it’s harder for me to make the time and space required by traditional artistic media. Like most people my age, my phone is always with me; over time, it’s worked its way into every corner of my life. I do everything else on my phone, so it was inevitable that at some point, I’d start drawing on it.
I’m Robin, a British designer, writer, and typographic nuisance from San Francisco. Today I’m a designer at Apple although previously I’ve made software at Retool, Sentry, and Gusto as well as for clients like Buttondown and XOXO.
I'm a product designer, engineer, photographer, and writer. Currently, I'm the founding product designer at Miter. Formerly, I was co-founder and product designer at Carrot Fertility. I'm an alumnus of Columbia University and the South Park Commons. On weekends, I write this blog and newsletter, travel with my wife and kids, run and bike and take photographs.
I'm Xe Iaso, I'm a technical educator, conference speaker, twitch streamer, vtuber, and philosopher that focuses on ways to help make technology easier to understand and do cursed things in the process. I live in Ottawa with my husband and I do developer relations professionally. I am an avid writer for my blog, where I have over 400 articles. I regularly experiment with new technologies and find ways to mash them up with old technologies for my own amusement.
Hi. Thanks for visiting. I’m Naz Hamid. This is my personal site where I explore art, craft, design, and technology in the digital and physical world.
hi there! i’m anh, a designer and artist this website is where i do silly web experiments and put all my personal content. it’s often experimental and messy so please pardon the dust!!
Besides writing overly personal essays and making blanket statements which I’ll later regret, I love reading, dancing, hiking, hanging with my friends, sitting on my balcony, getting confused about CSS, and trying to go on longer runs without dying. I’m a single mom with a small herd of teenagers. I think trees are really cool. Give me all the soft cheeses and red wine. Okay, fine, the hard cheeses, too. I enjoy live music, puns, outdoor dining, a good challenge, rainy days, thrift stores, witty humor, traveling, sandwiches, new words, the ocean, and driving with the windows down. I'm trying to learn German and not forget Spanish. I am a big fan of belly laughs, honesty, and the serial comma. And sleep.
I’m Luke Harris, a developer and designer who has spent way too much time on the computer. I live in Chicago with my partner and cats.
My name is Ruben Verweij and this is my personal wiki, digital garden, blog, or, to summarize: personal website. At the moment, I’m writing mostly about the following topics: Personal web (lightweight, fast, personal websites: a.k.a. Indieweb, smallweb), Books (book descriptions and reviews), Travel (going places), Tech (software, hardware and other technology) and Sanskrit (Sanskrit texts and the study of the language). I also keep track of what I’m focused on now. This website is bilingual: currently, 54% of the pages are written in English and 46% of the pages are written in Dutch.
Adrian Kosmaczewski is a software expert with over 28 years of experience, currently working as Senior Architect for Red Hat. He is a published author, trainer, and speaker. He has written many books about software development and has shipped cloud, mobile, and desktop apps since 1996. Adrian holds a Master in Information Technology from the University of Liverpool.
I’m Andreas, and this is the place where I write about all the things that catch my interest. It could be books, it could be music, it could be tech (especially retro tech), it could be random musings about society and philosophy or psychology… whatever comes to my mind.
Hi, I’m Kev and this is my corner of the web — part blog, part soapbox. You’ll find tech experiments, the occasional rant, and more than a few opinions that are probably wrong (but fun to argue about). Have a wander, you might find something interesting.
Nige, who, like Mr Kenneth Horne, prefers to remain anonymous, was also a founder blogger of The Dabbler and a co-blogger on the Bryan Appleyard Thought Experiments blog. He is the sole blogger on this one, and his principal aim is to share various of life's pleasures. These tend to relate to books, art, poems, butterflies, birds, churches, music, walking, weather, drink, etc, with occasional references to the passing scene. His book, The Mother of Beauty: On the Golden Age of English Church Monuments, and Other Matters of Life and Death, is available on Amazon or direct from the author.