マリウス Belongings
Ever wondered how minimalists live? Here are all the things one of them owns.
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Ever wondered how minimalists live? Here are all the things one of them owns.
A lovely communal web place where lots of people share tiny personal sites, gigs, notes, and small internet presence.
A 3D music clip in the browser. I have never seen a music video object quite like this before, and it rules.
Soham Saha's generative art experiments: little procedural systems where math turns into texture, motion, and pattern.
A gamey, alchemy-inspired profile that pushed me to play with that vibe on my own website.
A visual essay on Japanese web design, with screenshots, clustering, and cultural context.
A Neocities links page with the hand-curated feel that makes web wandering good again.
No idea who needs this, but here is the madman guide to writing a whole operating system in Rust.
A personal homepage from the Cookie Clicker dimension: experiments, toys, and odd little systems bubbling away.
A tiny website with a single-use curse, making one click feel weirdly ceremonial.
Retro-computing basement energy: old hardware, old games, and the glow of machines that refuse to leave.
A flea market of personal websites: messy rooms, bright buttons, strange shrines, and real people everywhere.
A page yelling that the html is enough, and annoyingly, it has a point.
Glittery handmade-web maximalism, like a forum, a garden, and a tiny internet town sharing one bedroom.
A tiny old personal portal that feels like it has been patiently waiting since 1996 for the web to come back around.
A personal blog rebuilt as a whole desktop OS, which is ridiculous, excessive, and honestly really cool.
A personal site with soft webcore energy and the usual lovely signs of someone making the internet their room.
l33t l1ttl3 h4ck0r club with shells, services, member pages, and proper terminal fumes.
Ben Hoyt on the small web: less algorithmic sludge, more handmade corners with a human pulse.