167 private links
Growing up in a poor family, I learned not to waste things, save money, reuse old stuff out of necessity, thus I’ve never approached minimalism from a privileged point of view. Being immersed in hyper consumeristic rituals has never been my experience.
Yup.
The empty big house "promote a way of life that looks unrealistic and fake". About this lifestyle:
Such lifestyle is not attainable by normal people. I mean the regular folks who need to go to work, cook their food, do the laundry, maybe some gardening or else — they can’t afford to spend buckets of money on few hyped products, buy coffee beans from a remote region in South America that cost half a salary at the point of sale. Above all, they cannot keep their place within a spotless private hospital aesthetic, because they actually live in there. They don’t usually give TED talks either, especially not to promote some other form of inspirational American Dream that’s great to sell another book.
They can’t afford to do with less.
No overly animated content.
No scroll jacking.
No excessive storytelling.
Defining a subset of the web that removes a lot of complexity :)
Provide a local index of sites complying with the requirements above, so that sites can be found without the use of an external search engine.
How does this scale? How is the index sorted? That was originally the answer provided by search engines.
I like this lite version where only a searchbar is available.
A minimalist email server without UI
Minimal CSS to look great: 58 bytes, 100 bytes, and 100 more bytes.
Styles are based on the HTML tag. This library is small and can be reused very fast.
It seems better for small projects than TailwindCSS.
The description speak for the service itself :
10kb.site is a write-only public text server.
You can upload any text you want at any file
path, as long as it's less than 10kb.Files can never be changed or updated (except this one).
Files are deleted after 1 day.
(shared by Arthur HOARO's links)