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The most beautiful collection of science, mathematics, and internet resources

https://abakcus.com/
1•tempodox•13s ago•0 comments

Show HN: We built AI to help bidding teams – mentioned by Kunal Bahl on ET Now

https://www.contravault.com
1•tanmayjuneja8•53s ago•0 comments

New marketplace let's you exchange metals locall

https://metalmoves.app/
1•zekardd•1m ago•0 comments

Data Models

https://datamodels.databases.biz/
1•TheAceOfHearts•2m ago•0 comments

The Untold Story of NotPetya, the Most Devastating Cyberattack in History

https://www.wired.com/story/notpetya-cyberattack-ukraine-russia-code-crashed-the-world/
1•basilikum•3m ago•0 comments

Show HN: A "TLDR for the internet" – curious if this is a problem

https://ondex.co
1•andrevaillant•5m ago•1 comments

As Complexity Grows, Architecture Dominates Material

https://worksonmymachine.ai/p/as-complexity-grows-architecture
1•Stwerner•5m ago•0 comments

Platforms bend over backward to help DHS censor ICE critics, advocates say

https://arstechnica.com/tech-policy/2026/02/platforms-bend-over-backward-to-help-dhs-censor-ice-c...
3•pjmlp•6m ago•0 comments

Show HN: Whisper Money – Open-source, privacy-first personal finance app

https://github.com/whisper-money/whisper-money
1•falcon_•8m ago•0 comments

Why do office chairs have 5 legs? [video]

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kKt46Lch2bo
2•throw0101c•8m ago•0 comments

Hare 0.26.0 Released

https://harelang.org/blog/2026-02-13-hare-0.26.0-released/
3•birdculture•8m ago•0 comments

I updated the README and my Benchmarks Regressed

https://codspeed.io/blog/unrelated-benchmark-regression
2•not-matthias•11m ago•1 comments

Switzerland to Vote on Capping Population at 10M

https://www.nytimes.com/2026/02/11/world/europe/switzerland-to-vote-on-capping-population-at-10-m...
7•bookofjoe•13m ago•3 comments

Writing C with indent-based syntax similar to CoffeeScript or Python, via Guile

https://sph.mn/computer/guides/c/c-indent.html
1•fanf2•14m ago•0 comments

A Programmer's Loss of Identity

https://ratfactor.com/tech-nope2
1•zdw•14m ago•0 comments

Code Archaeologists – Kevin.md

https://www.kevin.md/code-archaeologists.md/
1•thekevintang•15m ago•0 comments

Vim 9.2 Released

https://www.vim.org/vim-9.2-released.php
2•tapanjk•16m ago•0 comments

Promises Are Cheap

https://garymarcus.substack.com/p/promises-are-cheap
1•mldev_exe•17m ago•0 comments

Show HN: Musecl-memory – Persistent memory for AI agents in 200 lines of bash

https://github.com/musecl/musecl-memory
2•musecl•19m ago•0 comments

Use YouTube Privately – Materialious

https://github.com/Materialious/Materialious
2•wardpearce•19m ago•1 comments

My smart sleep mask broadcasts users' brainwaves to an open MQTT broker

https://aimilios.bearblog.dev/reverse-engineering-sleep-mask/
5•minimalthinker•20m ago•1 comments

Show HN: Isol8 – An isolated environment for AI agents to execute code

https://github.com/Illusion47586/isol8
1•masterbruce10•22m ago•0 comments

$8K laundry bot knows it has help standing by

https://www.theregister.com/2026/02/12/laundry_folding_robot_8000_dollars_teleoperated/
2•YeGoblynQueenne•23m ago•0 comments

She didn't expect to fall in love with a chatbot – and then have to say goodbye

https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/crl43dxwwy9o
1•headalgorithm•26m ago•0 comments

Ask HN: Are junior devs getting worse?

1•tavro•27m ago•3 comments

AI Hunts for the Next Big Thing in Physics

https://spectrum.ieee.org/particle-physics-ai
3•Brajeshwar•27m ago•0 comments

Where There Is Connectivity There Is Surveillance

https://www.noemamag.com/where-there-is-connectivity-there-is-surveillance/
3•Brajeshwar•27m ago•0 comments

System Prompts Define Agent Behavior

https://www.dbreunig.com/2026/02/10/system-prompts-define-the-agent-as-much-as-the-model.html
2•Brajeshwar•28m ago•0 comments

Show HN: Windows 98½ – fake desktop, real Internet

https://win9-5.com/demo
3•keepamovin•28m ago•6 comments

Show HN: Built and shipped an iOS app from my phone while traveling Japan

https://apps.apple.com/es/app/kotomaji-frases-jap%C3%B3n/id6755911289
2•lordokami•28m ago•0 comments
Open in hackernews

Ooh.directory: a place to find good blogs that interest you

https://ooh.directory/
125•hisamafahri•2h ago

Comments

ehecatl42•1h ago
> No blogs or categories were found matching emacs.

OK then.

wilkystyle•1h ago
You can be the first! (I'd be interested!)
throwaway150•42m ago
I've submitted entries but they never get added. I have no idea how they decide what makes it into the directory and what doesn't so I've stopped trying.
alansaber•1h ago
Vim wins again
8organicbits•1h ago
There's an RSS planet that curates blogs about emacs, for anyone who is looking.

https://planet.emacslife.com/

I've been building a list of blog lists, and I know of 136 feeds that use that category tag. (Open filters, select emacs under category, adjust language as needed).

https://alexsci.com/rss-blogroll-network/discover/

throwaway150•43m ago
>> No blogs or categories were found matching emacs.

> OK then.

Exactly. This is a deeper problem with ooh.directory, that the review process is opaque. They do not explain why something is added or rejected. I do not care much about Emacs itself but I submitted several of my favourite bloggers who write about retrogames, gaming rigs, and custom keyboards. None of them were added. None at all.

I do not think we should be encouraging closed directories like this in the community. I would much rather see a transparent directory where the review process is clear.

simonw•1h ago
Given how worried everyone is about the AI slopocalypse where the internet is drowned in LLM-generated junk content maybe it's time for a resurgence of human curated directories like this one.
gesis•1h ago
Let's bring back the webring.
8organicbits•1h ago
I joined a web ring last year, but I'm uncertain about it. Modern web rings tend to automate updates to the next/prev buttons, so I'm never sure what I'm linking to. The web ring owner acts as curator, but I don't know how much effort they put in to keep slop or other undesirable content out.
BoingBoomTschak•11m ago
I'm part of one and I don't think it really promotes discoverability. What could work would be some kind of search engine restricted to said webring to make a button to list similar articles. At least I would click on such a button!
roxolotl•10m ago
The no ai webring is full of really unique stuff. There’s definitively people out there still doing webrings. Now we need a metawebring.

https://baccyflap.com/noai/

myth_drannon•1h ago
It was tried before (e.g. Dmoz) and it does not work after it becomes popular.

I'm thinking more like just taking all the text files from 80-90s and making a separate static, frozen in time internet.

simonw•56m ago
Dmoz was trying to replicate the Yahoo! style of directory, which requires being comprehensive.

Today we don't need comprehensive, we need maximum signal and minimum noise.

zozbot234•28m ago
If you're not trying to be comprehensive it's not a real directory, it's justnan ordinary "awesome-list".
PaulRobinson•1h ago
A good idea, and one I had myself recently.

Some suggestions: I know none of us like "the algorithms choosing", but I think we can do better than alphabetical order. Number of clicks you see (popularity), or number of inbound links google tells you about would be good.

I also think you've gone to great effort, but it's still very light in some categories. I hope you keep going - what's your data source? Are you tracking outbound links from the ones you have indexed to find new blogs?

nefsim•1h ago
Finding niche, personal blogs has become so difficult lately because search results are dominated by massive corporate sites and SEO-optimized junk. This is a great way to actually discover the 'small web' again. It reminds me why I started following RSS feeds in the first place.
sdoering•1h ago
Agreed. I also like the small web lens in kagi. Helps me to search through and find interesting stuff to read and follow.
8organicbits•1h ago
You may be interested in a browser extension I launched at the end of last year. It keeps track of RSS feeds as you browse, helping you stay connected to the small web sites you discover.

https://github.com/robalexdev/blog-quest

cosmicgadget•9m ago
My buddy and I are building an index with a category interface like this one (and indieseek.xyz).

We index anything we consider authentic and contentful, but our category interface (mostly) consists of small web pages. Happy to hear any feedback.

Link: https://outerweb.org/explore-sorted

ramon156•1h ago
I'm subscribed to the Index Issue (i think that's the name) which has a nice short list of curated blogposts. Works for me!

Granted, I'd love a more technical version. Perhaps anyone here could start one?

Make an RSS list, pick the ones out you liked and BAM, you got my sub :)

8organicbits•1h ago
I was looking at the RSS spec a while back to figure out how the category field was supposed to work and ended up digging up web directory history.

https://alexsci.com/blog/rss-categories/

Syndic8, DMOZ, NewsIsFree, and TX (lost to history?) used the same taxonomy approach seen on ooh.directory. All are defunct now, but DMOZ appears to live on as curlie.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_web_directories

Technically, we could tag our RSS feeds with the taxonomy defined by ooh.dir, which would allow us to automatically sort blogs into topic groups, but I haven't found a single feed that uses the approach. We end up with ad-hoc category labels that are challenging to deduplicate, or more often, uncategorized blogs.

zozbot234•25m ago
Taxonomy labels are often deduplicated on Wikidata, the unofficial "hub" of the modern Semantic Web. There's already a defined property for matching DMOZ/Curlie labels, and others could be added if relevant.
engelo_b•1h ago
the google is dying narrative usually misses the fact that the incentive loop for niche blogs is just broken right now. we're caught between writing for the 'helpful content' algorithm or writing for actual humans. curated directories like this are basically the only way to bypass the seo arms race and find real domain expertise again.
cosmicgadget•5m ago
I'm not sure where they are at this moment, but a while back Google seemed to abandon EEAT and SEOed pages in favor of pure domain authority. So it no longer mattered if you page had the all-important "Key Takeaways".

Blogs are still discoverable via aggregators and link sharing. But those are ephemeral, directories like this and search engines like marginalia are important resources.

voy707•1h ago
the internet got just a little bit more human again.
throwaway150•56m ago
The problem with https://ooh.directory/ is that nobody can tell what gets added and what doesn't. Submissions go through an opaque review process and a lot of good submissions don't make it.

Just try searching your favorite bloggers in ooh.directory. 9 out of 10 times they'll be missing from the directory.

I'd prefer a more transparent directory where we can can tell why something is or isn't added.

esafak•53m ago
An RSS feed of changes would help.
7bit•39m ago
And then what? You're looking at a list of hundreds of submissions and why they have been added or not added, which completely defeats the purpose of that website.

I don't get the point of these sites, because it I want a curated list, I visit the front page of hackernews or reddit -- and trust the system.

Ohh.directory I'd the same thing, except for a different selection process.

You either trust it or you don't.

throwaway150•29m ago
> You either trust it or you don't.

don't see why it has to be this way. It doesn't take much to tell us what the review process is like and what gets added and what does not. If I know in advance that the blogs I submit are outside their scope, then I won't waste time submitting them.

I also don't see why there can't be an open directory of websites where the community makes decisions about what to add instead of leaving it to a single individual.

zozbot234•29m ago
> Submissions go through an opaque review process and a lot of good submissions don't make it.

That's no different than the old DMOZ.

throwaway150•28m ago
> That's no different than the old DMOZ.

Agree. This is no different from DMOZ. I'm asking here if there's something better, or if someone can make something better.

redmattred•52m ago
This is great. Some good nostalgia vibes.

The fact that it’s not exhaustive and is a reflection of the creator’s taste is a feature, not a bug.

tiffanyh•47m ago
https://minifeed.net is another similar site that I’ve enjoyed.