222 private links
A list of web browsers. The most exhaustive I've found so far.
(via https://nicolas-delsaux.hd.free.fr/Shaarli/shaare/yzmd3Q)
With the internet being ever present and screens surrounding us all the time, personal preference is becoming more and more critical for a good user experience. Particularly when it comes to dark mode in order not to burn out the readers sight at night.
The Darktheme Club is a collection of web pages from across the Internet. To qualify, your website must either use a dark theme by default, or respect the preference of the user, preferably through the prefers-color-scheme media query.
Paperwork, documents created, screenshots taken, bookmarked web pages, video and audio files.
Each gets a website.
These websites aren’t complicated – they’re just meant to be a slightly nicer way of browsing files than I get in the macOS Finder.
Each collection is a folder on my local disk, and the website is one or more HTML files in the root of that folder. To use the website, I open the HTML files in my web browser.
I’m deliberately going low-scale, low-tech. There’s no web server, no build system, no dependencies, and no JavaScript frameworks. I’m writing everything by hand, which is very manageable for small projects. Each website is a few hundred lines of code at most.
These are created and curated by hand.
I think this could be a powerful idea for digital preservation, as a way to describe born-digital archives.
Another example of accessibility statement I have found so far
One good example of accessibility statement I have found so far
Focus on the Moon, it shows the sky as your POV depending of the location.
Minimal interface ✅
Because ordering train tickets should be as easy as 1,2,3
Un premier article de macg.co partage l'initiative de 1.2. Train.
Le second relate les coûts de l'API et les commissions que les revendeurs obtiennent.
Un autres avis de https://tuxicoman.jesuislibre.net/2025/01/12train-com-pour-acheter-vos-billets-de-train.html souligne aussi que c'est bien ce qui semble être voulu par les utilisateurs.
I somehow enjoy how simple and efficient the website is!
The form should be the following:
*links resources only from the same domain (same tld)
- no CDN / Captchas / geographical restrictions
- does not require JavaScript for main functions (including e.g. writing comments, registration or placing orders)
- works in text browsers like Lynx
- screenshots of whole page can be saved (no weird scrolling, fixed panels etc.)
- if I save the page as HTML, it can be viewed offline later (including all important assets)
- no tracking or affilate links
- no ad system, no aggressive adverts (moderate ones are acceptable, content:advert ratio should be somehow 90:10 or better)
- meaningful titles and links (not misleading and if I bookmark the page, I can find it by keyword later)
- images have alternative text and / or description
- cited or borrowed content from other authors has proper references
- links to downloadable files say also format and size, e.g. „technical documentation (PDF, 560 KiB, 84 pages)“
- all pages have a timestamp / date of creation and last change
- says who is the author (may be a pseudonyme) and what is the purpose of the website; something like impressum
- catalog of all pages or at least news are available as RSS/Atom/RDF machine-readable format
- no annoying cookie consents, newsletters, pop-ups, paywalls etc.
- generated content (AI and other) is clearly marked (if any) and differentiated from human-created content
- no automatically playing videos or sounds; no autoplay (unless explicitly turned on by the user)
Maybe I could share mine someday. #futureBilletDeBlog
Someone points out the dark nets and the need for optimized websites. Other list different arguments or ideas.
Peelopaalu is an unsorted link collection that consists of random websites that I find interesting in some way.
Elle est toutes les bibliothèques que j'ai connues, ce que j'y ai trouvé de mieux et ce que j'aurais aimé y construire. Bref, La bib' est la bibliothèque de mes rêves, quand je rêve du coin de la rue.
Index.html, style.css and index.js. 3 files.
An example: https://frostapalooza.bradfrost.com/
Where is the line between blue and green?