Sources
From WhyNotWiki
Sources of information edit (Category edit)
[edit] Reference
[edit] Education
(too broad a category?)
[edit] Ruby / Sources of information
Ruby / Sources of information edit
- http://blogs.pragprog.com/cgi-bin/pragdave.cgi">Dave Thomas</a>, "Father of Ruby in the Western World" [1]
- http://chadfowler.com -- Chad Fowler -- "Noted author and Rubyist" [2]
- http://smallthought.com/avi/ -- Avi Bryant -- "Smalltalk (and Ruby) luminary" [3]
- http://headrush.typepad.com/ -- Kathy Sierra -- "Passionate about users" [4]
- http://weblog.jamisbuck.org/ -- Jamis Buck -- "Like a Ruby code machine" [5]
- http://sethgodin.typepad.com/ -- Seth Godin -- "Marketer with a cow obsession" [6]
- http://tenderlovemaking.com
- http://pezra.barelyenough.org/blog/category/ruby/
- RubyWeeklyNews [Mailing lists (category)] [7]
- Shedding Light on Ruby: Spreading the gospel
- Ruby on Windows
[edit] Rails / Sources of information
Rails / Sources of information edit
Loud Thinking by David Heinemeier Hansson

http://www.opensoul.org/ "the ethics of code | opensoul.org"
I'm Brandon Keepers, a web application developer that likes beautiful code, valid markup and adherence to standards. As a part of Collective Idea in Holland, Michigan, I practice Agile software development primarily using Ruby on Rails.
thoughts.sort_by{|t| t[:topic]}.collect
Rick Olson
(Mephisto developer)
http://pragdave.pragprog.com/pragdave/ruby_rails/index.html Ruby & Rails
http://glu.ttono.us/articles/category/rails
http://weblog.rubyonrails.com/
http://www.planetrubyonrails.org/tags/view/ruby
http://jayfields.blogspot.com/
http://www.softiesonrails.com/
http://www.actsasflinn.com/articles/category/rails
http://woss.name/category/geekery/ruby-and-rails/
http://blog.nbwd.co.uk/ Bamboo Blog
http://www.drnicwilliams.com/ Dr. Nic Williams
http://www.rubybyraeli.org/blog/ Ruby by ’Raeli
http://blog.methodmissing.com/ Rails, Ruby & Prototype ramblings—Lourens Naudé
http://www.fearoffish.co.uk/ Jamie van Dyke
http://ozone.wordpress.com/ Olivier Ansaldi
http://on-ruby.blogspot.com/ Pat Eyler
http://www.puneruby.com/blog/ PuneRuby
http://www.railsenvy.com/ Rails Envy
http://redhanded.hobix.com/ RedHanded
http://www.rorsecurity.info/ RoR Security
http://www.rubyfleebie.com/ Ruby Fleebie
http://rubyunderground.org/ Ruby Underground
http://webonrails.com/ Web On Rails
http://web2withrubyonrails.gauldong.net/ Web 2.0 With Rails
http://blog.nicksieger.com/ Nick Sieger -- "Working with glue that doesn't set"
http://www.rubyinside.com/railstips/ Rails Tips
http://blog.teksol.info/ A Single Programmer's Blog (François)
http://interblah.net/ interblah.net—conflagration over configuration
I am not a designer -- The personal website of Jeremy Hubert i turn pretty designs into great softwareThis is a bunch of useless text that allows me to see what the words here would look like when I actually get around to writing some proper content.
If I had written this and actually intended for it to be seen by people like you, I probably would have put a little bit more effort into it.
Either way, this should do the trick.
http://mir.aculo.us/ fuchs
http://www.jvoorhis.com/ voorhis
http://iamrice.org/ tanner
http://www.atmos.org/ atmos
http://david.goodlad.ca/ goodlad
http://AlternateIdea.com / http://encytemedia.com/ "AlternateIdea: A self-proclaimed design ninja" (Justin is Co-founder and Interaction Super-hero for Active Reload, LLC., the company behind Lighthouse and Mephisto.)
http://jystewart.net/ jystewart.net : Reading, writing, web development
http://rails.co.za/ Rails Co ZA -- sharing development tips we'd like to remember
http://www.igvita.com/blog/ igvita.com
http://blog.brightredglow.com/
def euler(x); cos(x) + i*sin(x); end
[edit] Computers/technology/Internet
http://mamamusings.net/ -- elizabeth lane lawley's thoughts on technology, academia, family, and tangential topics (associate professor, information technology • director, lab for social computing • rochester institute of technology)
http://www.projectgoodluck.com/blog/ Project Good Luck
http://www.theshiftedlibrarian.com/ The Shifted Librarian ([Library science (category)]?)
http://www.gadberry.com/aaron/category/computers/
[edit] Programming languages / Sources of information
Programming languages / Sources of information edit
http://lambda-the-ultimate.org/ Lambda the Ultimate | Programming Languages Weblog
http://ejohn.org/blog/ John Resig - Blog
[edit] Software development / Sources of information
Software development / Sources of information edit
http://andy.pragprog.com/ Andy's Blog
http://codekata.pragprog.com/ CodeKata
Getting good at a discipline requires practice. Over on the CodeKata blog you'll find challenges to hone your developer skills.
http://www.techinterview.org/ techInterview - puzzles and interview questions
Welcome to techInterview, a site for technical interview questions, brain teasers, puzzles, quizzles (whatever the heck those are) and other things that make you think!
http://greenprogrammer.blogspot.com/ (Rails, etc.)
http://www.io.com/~jimm/blog/ (Programming, Ruby, ...)
- http://code.whytheluckystiff.net/ is a beautiful index page to his Subversion repository
http://www.randsinrepose.com/ -- Software development, management

http://www.timhardy.net/wordpress/ Tim Hardy -- Programming, software, computer science
http://www.ntecs.de/ (Michael Neumann) -- Ruby projects, interesting personal info/projects, Mathematics/Algorithms, most in en/de
- Languages Page (en, de) - with hundreds of examples in more than 130 different programming languages, including APL, etc.
[edit] software/computers/technology/software development/
[edit] Software / Sources of information
Software / Sources of information edit
http://secretsofconsulting.blogspot.com/ The Secrets of Consulting
http://nothing.tmtm.com/ Understanding Nothing
http://www.43folders.com/ wiki: productivity, time management, software, and life hacks.

DoxPara Research (Dan Kaminsky)

http://www.bieberlabs.com/wordpress/
http://www.gdargaud.net/ Guillaume Dargaud's website -- Computers, humor, quotes, climbing, photography
http://addictedtonew.com/ Addicted To New -- "my personal site where I post on a blend of web development and my life. I love learning new things to the point that sometimes my wife has to smack me and tell me to get off the computer. I previously operated under the domain johnnunemaker.com, but that is my name and as such is not very cool. I hope you enjoy your stay and that you too become addicted to new things." -- Rails, Javascript
http://www.savagexi.com/ http://cfis.savagexi.com/ cfis (Charlie Savage's blog) -- Ruby, etc.
- http://voisen.org/ voisen.org
- marketingvox.com - New Internet marketing developments, blog format
- wired.com - Hi tech meets society
- Joi Ito Blog - A forward thinking Japanese Internet veteran's personal blog
- Seth Godin's blog - The marketing Guru speaks
- b3ta.com - Some UK guys having fun with the Internet community (ever heard of 'photoshopping'?)
- fark.com - Innovative link community based 'fun news' business model
http://stateless.geek.nz/ Somewhere out there!
- "Stay curious!"
- Mostly about MySQL
http://arbitraryusefulinfo.wordpress.com/
"Arbitrary Useful Information" -- Nice name
"Goal: Post bits of information that I've found useful and are not easy to find."
Linux, etc.
http://www.paulstimesink.com/ .
[edit] Web applications
Sources of information / Web applications edit
Information about creative web applications, the Web as a platform, etc. Directories/lists of them, news, etc.
http://mashupawards.com/ MashupAwards - The best mashups on the web
http://www.programmableweb.com/ ProgrammableWeb - Mashups, APIs, and the Web as Platform: Keeping you up to date with the latest on mashups and the new Web 2.0 APIs
The web is changing, and we are here to punctuate that change. With companies large and small offering up their APIs for public use, a new era of creative possibility has arisen.
- http://www.programmableweb.com/search Mashup Tag Cloud
http://www.webmashup.com/ Mashups & Web 2.0 API Directory http://blogs.businessweek.com/the_thread/techbeat/archives/mash-ups/index.html http://www.mashup-news.com/ Mashups News
[edit] Social software (wikis, etc.)
Sources of information / Social software edit
http://many.corante.com/ Many-to-Many: A group weblog on social software
http://www.bloglines.com/public/mamamusings/
http://www.zephoria.org/thoughts/ apophenia: making connections where none previously existed
- "My name is danah boyd and i'm a PhD student in the School of Information at Berkeley and a fellow at USC Annenberg Center. I currently live in Venice, CA. Buzzwords in my world include: identity, context, social networks, youth culture, social software, performance, Friendster, MySpace. I use this blog to express random thoughts about whatever i'm thinking about."
http://digitalyouth.ischool.berkeley.edu/ DIGITAL YOUTH RESEARCH | Kids' Informal Learning with Digital Media
http://www.henryjenkins.org/ Confessions of an Aca-Fan: The Official Weblog of Henry Jenkins
[edit] Ontology and the semantic Web
Sources of information / Ontology and the semantic Web edit
(nothing here yet)
[edit] Misc
Neat New Stuff on the Net - Weekly Reviews of New Sites by Marylaine Block ...
[edit] Sources of news
- WorldNetDaily - A Free Press for a Free People (Christian worldview)
- http://newswithviews.com/ NewsWithViews.com -- "Where Reality Shatters Illusion"
City Journal is the nation’s premier urban-policy magazine, “the Bible of the new urbanism,” as London’s Daily Telegraph puts it. During the Giuliani Administration, the magazine served as an idea factory as the then-mayor revivified New York City, quickly becoming, in the words of the New York Post, “the place where Rudy gets his ideas.” The Public Interest goes further, calling City Journal “the magazine that saved the city.”
But City Journal is a national, not just a local, force, with a readership that spans the U.S.—and an especially enthusiastic audience in the nation’s capital. The country’s most thoughtful journalists are among the quarterly magazine’s subscribers, as are top businessmen and financiers. City officials from coast to coast are loyal fans, and mayors from Milwaukee’s John Norquist to Oakland’s Jerry Brown happily acknowledge City Journal’s influence on their own thinking and policy. Newspapers across the land, from the Wall Street Journal to the San Diego Union-Tribune, regularly print adaptations of City Journal articles, disseminating the magazine’s influence to millions of readers.
City Journal offers a stimulating mix of hard-headed practicality and cutting-edge theory, with articles on everything from school financing, policing strategy, and welfare policy to urban architecture, family policy, and the latest theorizing emanating from the law schools, the charitable foundations, even the schools of public health. Since urban policy encompasses almost all domestic policy questions, as well as the largest issues of our culture and society, the magazine views its canvas as very broad indeed. The magazine holds itself to the highest intellectual, journalistic, and literary standards, aiming to produce intelligent and absorbing reading for intelligent and discerning readers.
- http://blog.lewrockwell.com/ -- conservative? commentary on politics, government
http://thetruthproject.us/ The T.R.U.T.H. Project (The Resistance to Usurpers & Tyrants of Humanity)
http://www.leaderu.com/focus/truthfeature.html Leadership U. Special Focus: Telling the Truth: Truth journal
Truth is an inter-disciplinary, non-specialized journal for the academic community (students, professors, scholars) with a distinctively Christian perspective and seeks to provide a critical analysis of crucial contemporary intellectual issues. The issues discussed are scientific, philosophical, literary, historical or theological in nature.
http://www.homeschoolblogger.com/christinemiller/ "a little perspective": Christine Miller's blog
- Persuasions: anti-war, pro-gun, atheist but apparently gets along with Christians pretty well
- Interests: Libertarian politics, Austrian economics, Linux, ...
http://conservativeculture.com/
[edit] Political commentary / Sources
Political commentary / Sources edit
- http://takeitpersonally.blogspot.com/
- Eagle Forum
- Education Reporter
- Timely Topics
- Court Watch
- Radio program
- The American Conservative magazine
- http://thearmchairrepublican.blogspot.com/
- http://sillielizziesrock.blogspot.com/ "SUBVERTING THE SUBVERSION....unabashedly Christian and Conservative. A Blog at the intersection of Religion and Politics [...]."
See also: Christian resources edit
[edit] Nice web sites
This page is for sites that are nice/good in at least one way:
- Sites that have a nice/pretty design -- sites that are visually nice. (See also Pretty designs!)
- Sites that have good content, etc.
Good web sites edit (Category edit)
Nice web sites edit (Category edit)
[edit]
http://rick.cogley.info/blog/
Pretty. Nice, fun (pastel?) color palette. Nice photo for the header.
[edit] Pacific Press
http://www.pacificpress.com/index.php?pgName=splWelcome
I think it has an attractive home page. The overlapping boxes and large photo (which blends into the other graphic element) are largely to blame for this. Still, I'd only rate this page a
.
[edit] BoardGameGeek
http://www.boardgamegeek.com/game/2225
A great example of a [collaborative database (category)] site. It has user ratings, tags, etc. for each game in its database. It has nice collapsible sections. It has sections that are editable wiki content.
It has structured information:
- Designed By: (Uncredited)
- Published By: Parker Brothers
- of Players: 4
- Playing Time: 45 Minutes
- Mfg Suggested Ages: 18 and up
- Category: Word
- Mechanics: N/A
- Other Names: N/A
[edit] http://betterexplained.com/
"Understanding beyond your textbook"
This site is about understanding concepts using clear, intuitive insights. I want to put my “a-ha!” epiphanies into your head; a website was the best non-surgical option. Read more...
Good name. Great idea. And great explanations.
Content/topics: math, web development, The Quick Guide to GUIDs, etc.
[edit] Nice project web sites
Not strictly limited to project sites. Basically anything that's not a personal site. Company sites/blogs, for example, would also (currently) go here.
- http://wikitravel.org/en/Wikitravel:Project
- http://fink.sourceforge.net/
- http://wiki.opendarwin.org/index.php/Fink
- http://www.whytheluckystiff.net/ruby/redcloth/
- http://daringfireball.net/projects/markdown/
- Semantic MediaWiki, requirements
[edit] Ethereal/Wireshark
[edit] Download page
http://www.ethereal.com/download.html
I like how they show multiple download options in a pretty intuitive and concise manner: a main download link (nice icon) "or" [select a mirror from a dropdown] "or" SourceForge.
[edit]
Patent Commons
http://www.patent-commons.org/
[edit]
Openads
The whole site has a nice, clean, organized feel to it -- not just the home page. Nice use of colors. Nice simple tour, but with links to the demo site or the extensive documentation if you want more.
[edit]
OpenPrinting
I thought their home page was very informative. Maybe it's just the fact that the information on the site is so useful, but I think their nicely organized home page might have helped too.
http://www.linux-foundation.org/en/OpenPrinting.
They have these major sections:
- OpenPrinting: Overview of site...
- Many, many links included within the paragraphs (inline links). Takes a big site and makes it more manageable/accessible to the average visitor by providing links to many of the most used/useful sections of the site.
- "Looking for configuration or driver help? "
- Try our CUPS Quick Start
- or look for your printer in the OpenPrinting Database.
- For more detail, try Till's Tutorial.
- If all else fails, ask a human in the forums.
- "Researching a printer purchase?"
- Start with suggested printers,
- or browse our database.
- "Looking for software?"
- We host Foomatic,
- printer driver packages,
- and some other programs.
- "Want to help?"
- Here's how.
- Make distribution-independent printer driver packages with the LSB DDK! [For developers]
- Announcements/News
- For Developers
- The Goal
- How the goal is achieved
[edit]
http://capify.org/
A nice clean and simple site. Happy colors. Doesn't feel cluttered.
[edit]
http://activereload.net/ "Active Reload: We build web applications"
http://warehouseapp.com/ "Warehouse — Subversion Browser"
I like their background image (on both sites) -- it's nice and textured, not just a plain flat color -- gives the page a bit of warmth and liveness.
http://lighthouseapp.com/ Lighthouse: Simple hosted Issue tracking, bug tracking, and project management software.
[edit]
Mono
http://www.mono-project.com/Moonlight Moonlight , http://www.mono-project.com/SVN
- Very graphically pretty
- The top navigation/heading area especially:
- Nice logo
- Main links are "start", "use", "contribute", and "need help" -- rollover effect is attractive
- Another box with "screenshots", "manuals & docs", "download now", and "blogs" (each of these has an icon)
- Asymmetrical wavy green line instead of the usual symmetrical, blocky look
- [Powered by MediaWiki (category)] -- I wouldn't have been able to tell! (The usual edit, talk, log-in, etc. links are absent. I take that back -- it has a "Create an account or log in" link at the bottom.)
[edit]
Git
Very simple, but very clean and attractive. I like.
http://git.or.cz/course/svn.html
[edit]
Mozilla Developer Center
http://developer.mozilla.org/en/docs/Main_Page
[Powered by MediaWiki (category)]
[edit]
dokuwiki
http://wiki.splitbrain.org/wiki:dokuwiki
Organized well into sections with bullet points:
About DokuWiki* A feature list :!: * Happy Users * Who wrote about it * What Bloggers think * Compare it with other wiki softwareInstalling DokuWiki
* System Requirements * Download DokuWiki :!: * Change Log * How to install or upgrade :!: * ConfigurationUsing DokuWiki
* Wiki Syntax * The manual :!: * Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ) * Glossary * Search for DokuWiki help and documentationCustomizing DokuWiki
* Tips and Tricks * How to create and use templates * Installing plugins * Development ResourcesDokuWiki Feedback and Community
* Join the mailing list :!: * Check out the user forum * Talk to other users in the IRC channel * Submit bugs and feature wishes * Share your experiences in the WikiMatrix forum * Some humble thanks
Multi-lingual
[edit]
dev-utils
http://dev-utils.rubyforge.org/ The Ruby dev-utils Project
Pretty well organized. Sections:
- Internet Links
- Installation Instructions
- Administrivia
In the header, it says require 'dev-utils' -- which I think is a neat marketing trick to subconsciously remind people how easy it is to start using this library (just require that file and you're good to go).
[edit]
F-Spot
- Clean and attractive
- Dark background frames the white content area rather well
- [Powered by MediaWiki (category)]
[edit] schemamania.org
This project site isn't great because of any design-related niceness. Rather, I like it because of its very nice prose. The candor and openness of the author is also very exemplary.
[edit] Examples of good writing (c)
Specifically: nice prose (c).
http://www.schemamania.org/schemamania/.
Schema Mania is a place for people who like (or need, or are just good at) database designs. It's completely non-profit, dependent on the enthusiasm of its visitors and the talent of its contributors....
Schema Mania was conceived as a repository of database designs. You'd be able to come here, browse for a database design in your "problem space". With luck, you'd find something at least similar to what you had in mind. You'd download it, adapt it to your needs, and be happy. www.schemamania.org would be a web of database designs, if you will.
But, a funny thing happened on the way to the forum. Much of the technology that Schema Mania needs is not ready for general use. What's available is nascent; the rest is missing. However valuable the concept might be, Schema Mania lacks both software and standards. It thus became part of Schema Mania's goal to bring together people of various disciplines, to help them find each other and create better tools.
...
Pictures are, as Confucius never said, worth a thousand words in this regard. A picture of a database is very helpful for human beings who want to understand the design. For implementation, though, we need a way to communicate the picture to the database. Later on (or, sometimes, earlier on), it's nice to have a way to convert existing database designs into pictures. We need, in other words, an intelligent picture, one that can be created from words and converted to words. We need it, but it doesn't exist. Not yet, not quite.
It's hardly news that file formats for pictures abound on the web. JPEG, PNG, you name it, the web does graphics. What these formats have in common is that they treat the picture as a block of dots. To the extent that they can be said to contain information, that information is only useful to the program that displays the picture. They are to intelligent diagrams as a fax is to email: Understandable and useful to the human being, but intractable, just a blob of dots.
...
The great thing about standards, as some wag said, is that there are so many to pick from. Pictures have not stopped at the blob-of-dots dead end. The W3C developed Scalar Vector Graphics (SVG), an XML derivative. And there's a little-heralded part of the Gnome Office called Dia. [...] Dia shapes can be described with SVG, and the whole Dia diagram is stored as XML according to a freely available DTD. In a market defined as "free software to create diagrams stored in a published XML format", Dia is alone. It has no competition.
Dia is short for "Diagram". [...] A blob of dots it's certainly not. Dia makes intelligent pictures.
...
For Schema Mania to become what it was conceived as, Dia (or something like it, but there is nothing else like it) is a sine qua non. But Dia needs more database intelligence, and it needs more and better conversion tools. In a bootstrappy way, it became Schema Mania's immediate purpose to do what it can to facilitate these events, to convert hope into reality.
Schema Mania aims to coordinate links and information about the disparate efforts to bring Dia to databases. If you know of such an effort, send me a link and a note about what you think about it. I'll add it to the collection.
...
By the way, "databases" means relational databases. [...] At this point in the history of technology, relational databases are widespread, well-understood, entrenched, and unchallenged. The envisioned population of Schema Maniacs have relational designs to use and share. No offense intended to enthusiasts of more enlightened database architectures.
...
Because XMI can hold information about object models generally, it's a bit heavyweight for holding simple relational models. But it might suit our purpose.
...
About the author. Not much to say, really. If you know me, you might find my helter-skelter home page handy (or not). By day I work as a quantitative analyst; Schema Mania is strictly a hobby. Well, it's also a passion, because hobbies should be passions, after all.
[edit] Locus Focus: RAM
http://locusfoc.us/ram Locus Focus — RAM : Vision is where you look for it.
- Different icons for "new features" and "bug fixes"; these are used as the bullet symbol for bulleted lists
- Pull quotes: Quite round and organic; and it appears to come out of not just the guy's name but also his photo
[edit]
script.aculo.us
They have a very different design from most sites. Most sites use rectangles (with rounded corners if you're lucky); they use circles! Scandalous.
[edit]
Videolan's Wiki
[Wiki-based (category)][Pretty designs (category)]
- Various boxes, like Wikipedia portal sites
- 2 wide boxes at top
- 3 vertical boxes below that
- Each box is a different color -- pleasant pastel colors
[edit] http://geminstaller.rubyforge.org/index.html
Very well documented. Very complete.
Could be organized a bit better, but is decently so...
[edit]
Semantic MediaWiki
Sections (boxes):
- Introduction (big box)
- Scope of the project
- The Semantic MediaWiki extension
- Current participants [Not sure why this is important to have on the front page]
- News and events
- Where we are now
- Problem statement
- Related work
- Background: Ontologies and the Semantic Web
- What we want
- Overall goals
- Requirements
- Envisaged applications
- How we plan to do it
- Project phase
- They really try to involve people; they ask for your ideas, what requirements you consider important
[edit]
http://wordpress.org/
- Clean and attractive
- Compelling marketing claims. ("state-of-the-art semantic personal publishing platform with a focus on aesthetics, web standards, and usability")
- Organization: "Welcome" and "Welcome Back" sections
- Categories idea appears to be copied from MediaWiki (f.e., http://codex.wordpress.org/Category:Getting_Started)
[edit]
http://plone.org/ plone.org
- Very clean and attractive
- Images
- Boxes
- Vertical lines
[edit]
http://www.aptana.com/docs/index.php/Main_Page Aptana
[edit]
http://pastebin.com/pastebin.php?help=1
I like how it answers all of these questions that people are likely to have -- all on one page even!
- What is pastebin?
- And this is all free?
- Can I get the source?
- I have some feedback, who do I contact?
[edit]
wiki.pluginaweek.org
http://wiki.pluginaweek.org/Main_Page
Welcome to wiki.pluginaweek.org
The Community PluginAWeek Documentation Project
[edit] What am I doing here?
Well, our best guess is that you're looking for more information on our plugins or want to contribute some caveats, tricks, or other related information. If that's the case, then you're at the right place (if it's not, check out our blog and go from there). If you want to contribute to the wiki, please first sign up for an account. Also, make sure you search for the information before adding it to the wiki. It may be that someone else has already contributed the same information, but it hasn't been categorized correctly yet.
[edit] So where to go from here?
We've categorized each released plugin based on the component that it uses/affects. If you can't find a certain plugin, you can either look in the "Miscellaneous" categories or use the search on the left. Note: Unreleased plugins will not be documented anywhere on the PluginAWeek wiki/blog/trac (unless you're sneaky ;)).
For a summary of every plugin that has been released so far, see Plugin Summaries.
For a more complete listing of everything available in this wiki, you can browse all of the categories or pages.
Comments:
- Tells the user what they might be interested in, what they can do on this wiki...
- Pretty organized
- There's a nice list of categories floated to the right of the page...
- Overall, though, ironically, I find the site kind of hard to navigate
[edit] To do
Should take snapshots (with Internet Archive?) of each site, in case its design changes since I last reviewed it!
[edit] Article metadata
[Duplication (category)] with software projects database (each project in the list has an associated web site).
See also: Nice web sites
Nice web sites edit (Category edit)
Nice project web sites edit (Category edit)
[edit] Nice personal web sites
[edit] http://timtyler.org/
Interesting interests...
[edit] http://www.utilitarienne.com/
utilitarienne - making it easy :: home
Nice flower image
[edit] http://www.igvita.com/blog/ igvita.com
Quite attractive looking. And a very interesting site.
He has a Top Posts section, ordered by PostRank, using [AideRSS (category)].
Error on call to Template:cite web: Parameter url must be specified.
Welcome, my name is Ilya Grigorik and for good or for worse, I’m the mastermind behind everything you’ve read on this blog. I am a tinkerer at heart, a hopeless digerati, and at times adesigner. I received my BCS (Computer Science) degree from the University of Waterloo, and I’m currently studying at the DGP (Dynamic Graphics Lab) at the University of Toronto for my Masters. When not writing about Ruby, my professional interests revolve around the intersection of Machine Learning / Data Mining and Human-Computer Interaction (HCI).My self-proclaimed job title is “Internet Engineer”, and this blog is a direct extension of this passion. In the process, I’ve started: AideRSS, Graphics World, ForteHost, and Club Atenza. I learn by doing, thoroughly enjoy the creative process, [...]
...
- I do have four monitors on my desk.
- I am a fan of Tablet PC’s – greatest gadget ever.
- I do have a computer in my car. I built it myself.
- I read at least a book a week, but my reading list does not want to budge. [?]