Spyke
fedinsfw.app

I'm old. I was an adult when the internet first started. And this is the coolest thing I've ever seen online. Thanks for sharing!

21

You're welcome! I was an older teenager when the worldwide web started taking off in '94 — is that what you mean? A lot of people associate the Internet and the WWW, but IIRC the first email was sent in the 1960s. I'm getting old. Sometimes I feel old, sometimes I feel young. As a gamer, I try to stay current with tech, but while I like some modern games, I'm having so much fun catching up on 360/PS3 and 3ds era gaming. Like my wife got Animal Crossing for the Switch, but I'm enjoying the 3ds version more. It's a bit older, a bit uglier, my girl has hair like Claire/Molly Ringwald in Breakfast Club, but it's okay, I'll unlock the hair salon eventually.

8

I didn't recognise the name but when I clicked I recognised it instantly, I'm astounded but happy this is still around

13

Yo that techno Viking is spot on. Nailed the point and the moves.

3

I think there's a guide. I follow them on Telegram and they post whenever they add something (with a direct link to the coordinates). Lately he's been working on the flea market area with Link and Zelda.

3

Thanks for reminding me about this -- such an astounding work of art.

1
lemmy.world

I’m not saying it’s the coolest, but I made a thing to scratch an itch that others may enjoy. I modeled it after something I found a few decades back that I never found again.

https://rhuidean.studio/


Forgot to mention it is available as a tui too. cargo install rhuidean-studio

86
lemmy.world

I have absolutely no idea what this is or what it's supposed to do but it's incredibly fun to poke at

20

Kinda reminds me of strudel repl

It’s like a completely different way to create music (even though, idk if OP intended it to be for that)

8
anon6789reply
lemmy.world

That was fun! 😁

Perfect 4th with linear velocity starts to cascade before they all reconverge with a big bleep. That was my favorite.

7

Oh that is cool! It makes stars and trippy fan blade patterns. It's neat you can share the link like that to share the patterns too.

It's like a kaleidoscope that also works for the ears. 😁

7

I have loads of questions, like why does this exist, and why is there a fucking karaoke player with licensed tracks on this parody?

8
Psythikreply
lemmy.world

Did you not see the "that no one knows about" part of the question?

-12
lemmy.zip

Saving this for later! As someone who knows more about software than hardware, this sounds interesting!

8
sopuli.xyz

I tried it but the game is kind of confusing cause it uses relays instead of transistors. I think it's more frustrating and would only discourage potential learners.

A better way to get a solid grasp on low-level hardware logic is to just build an eight-bit breadboard computer. Here's a tutorial: https://eater.net/8bit

I'm working on it now. I've only done the first module so far and I've already learned so much.

2

Good to know. I think once I learn how the relays compare to transistors, I can probably figure out the first level.

2
sopuli.xyz

I just tried it and it's so much harder to understand than just playing around with transistors on a breadboard.

Like, I can easily make a nand gate with a couple NPNs and a PNP. But I couldn't figure out what they wanted me to do with those relays, so I didn't get past the first task.

3
piefed.zip

Sure, building your own breadboard computer is much better than playing with some website... However transistors and relays are kind of similar in function, they both gate whether current flows.

If you are already familiar with transistors, then I agree those are a simpler introduction, however most regular people don't know anything about a transistor, and they seem a little bit magical.

A relay however can be grasped by most people just by looking at it in operation. Magnet attracts... Electromagnets only attracts when powered... wire doesn't conduct when not connected... Wire does conduct when connected... Electromagnet can pull or push wire to either connect or disconnect...

If you want the solution for the first task (building a nand gate with relays), you can see my solution here: ::: spoiler spoiler :::

2
sopuli.xyz

Okay, without reading the spoiler:

Does the inductor lead function like the switch on the transistor?

And the two relays: default (on) and default (off): is default (on) like the PNP transistor and default (off) like the NPN?

I think with those two bits of information, I can figure it out. But last night I didn't have the patience to figure it out by trial and error.

2
sopuli.xyz

I went through all the units. They were interesting, and I definitely learned a bunch. I probably won't remember it all right away, but I at least have a better idea of the overall picture. It'll be reinforced as I continue my breadboard project, but also supports my theoretical understanding of that project. So I'd say it was worth it.

Imagine my surprise when I got to the end and realized there are multiple paths that branch off from there into new units 😱

It seems the learning shall continue...

3

IIRC, they'll add new books every year, as older books slowly become Public Domain, so classics like a bunch of Tarzan books (though not all of them, yet) have become available.

Also, for those that don't get the name: Johannes Gutenberg invented the printing press that was much better than existing presses (and pretty new to Europe).

12

Project Gutenberg predates the internet. I still remember how their goal was to give away one trillion ebooks.

Project Gutenberg is still around, so I won't say this is an example of the internet getting worse. But I loathe how it's come to focus on damnable social media like there's nothing else of worth out there. Social media, among other things, filled the air with noise that starved many worthwhile projects of attention.

8
lemmy.world

dimensions.com

It's the weirdest shit I've ever seen. Before I get into it, I want to point out that I've been using this site for years, since before LLMs were a thing, so this is definitely not generated by AI.

It's just like, generic outline drawings of things. Objects, people, places, everything.

So sometimes I like to draw, and I need a model to work from for the pose and the proportions, and this site has a ton of them. Child kicking a ball? Yes. Adult man sitting on a bench? Several options to choose from. Woman carrying a box? Three different poses.

Pointing, pushing, protesting, thinking, vacuuming, raising one's hand to summon a waiter in a restaurant, it's all there.

I'm sure there's some kind of industrial use for it, like for diagrams or blueprints or something, but then we get to the descriptions. Like on the page for people carrying boxes, it says:

People lift boxes either in their personal lives or at work. People lift boxes to move residences. Mailmen or delivery truck drivers lift boxes everyday as part of their job. Some jobs may require their applicants to be able to lift a certain weight of box. When lifting boxes, it is important to lift with your knees instead of your back to prevent back injury.

Then there's always three questions, which they provide answers to. For carrying, those questions are:

What is a carry on bag?

What is carrying capacity?

How much can a horse carry?

Why? Whom is that for?

Under the pictures of elderly people it asks things like "What are the best exercises for maintaining mobility in seniors?" and "How can seniors adapt their homes for safety and accessibility?"

Is this for dolphins? Did a dolphin learn to read English, and they want to understand human society?

I'm struggling to find the weirdest examples, because honestly it's the breadth as well as the depth. Someone clearly put a ton of work into this, and I love it, but I don't understand it.

41
Crackhappyreply
lemmy.world

Alright. I figured it out. This is for aliens trying to understand us.

10
moakleyreply
lemmy.world

But they'd have written it in alienese. That's why I say dolphins - without a formal writing system of their own, they'd naturally default to a human one for the purpose of studying humans.

7

I think it's for n-dimensional beings trying to understand lower dimensional existence

3
moakleyreply
lemmy.world

Was my link not clickable? It looks clickable on my browser.

1

It's not on the app I'm using, I assume the browser just generates a link for every URL-like string while the app doesn't necessarily

3
pelespiritreply
sh.itjust.works

This is for architects and designers. There used to be books that had these dimensions and stats that were ungodly expensive at the time.

2
moakleyreply
lemmy.world

Why do architects and designers need a description of what carrying boxes is? Why do they need tips on senior mobility? It's weird.

1
pelespiritreply
sh.itjust.works

Why do architects and designers need a description of what carrying boxes is?

Say you work for a firm that mostly does office buildings. This firm hasn't done a building with a mail room in decades, but now has a project with a mail room for whatever reason. There is no one at the office that would know this info, so you need to look it up. For safety and liability, you have to design for ergonomics. You use the 2d drawings for your details and elevations that explain it.

Why do they need tips on senior mobility?

Similar, the firm does hospitals, but was asked to do a senior living home. There are very specific requirements for elderly living. There are classes on this alone for architects and designers. If you are an older designer, you might need to know new info and studies out there. You use these for elevations so you can design heights and materials and finishes for the elderly. For example, if all of the colors are the same for the hallway, the elderly won't be able to distinguish between the floor and the walls.

It sounds like you've never known an architect or designer before. There is a lot of information going on in their heads, especially for healthcare or anywhere there needs to be repetitive work done. Architects and designers are liable for what goes into their drawings. They're contracts.

1
moakleyreply
lemmy.world

Fair enough. Those were bad examples. Explain this one, under "thinking":

How do you stop thinking about someone?

To stop thinking about someone look for closure. Other methods may include finding someone else to think about, thinking of their negative traits, staying busy, and most importantly, respecting yourself. In the end, remember that it will all pass, and while there might not be a short term plan, patience and initiative will go a long way.

I've never met an architect before, so maybe you can give me a plausible reason they'd need to know about closure.

Here's an entry from "looking":

What does “Here’s looking at you, kid” mean?

The phrase “Here’s looking at you, kid” is fondly remembered from Rick’s famous line from the film Casablanca. The phrase means that he/she is happy the other person is there, and that the other person looks attractive.

Or how about this one under "comic books & video games"?

Are comic books better than movies?

Comic books are typically better than movies due to a variety of reasons that include cost and time, the personal vision of the author and artists, as well as their experimental and bold nature. Comics also deeply care about their viewers as well as create an engaging and active process.

I just can't imagine how a designer would use this.

1

Those are the first examples you've given that don't make sense. All of the other ones were straight out of our reference books. II have no idea about the others. Is it open sourced info where people didn't get the memo on how to add to it?

1

It’s always fun to scroll, scroll, scroll, and then tap the light speed button in the lower right corner.

5
Wildmimicreply
anarchist.nexus

cool, i love the other 2 "Loathing" games, but didn't know there was a third one and it's free too!

1

Don't forget Mr. Card Game!

(it's actually pretty okay to forget Mr. Card Game, it's not great)

1

Kingdom is the first one, actually. It's got a surprising amount of content, it's designed to be played over and over again continuously.

West and Shadows are both designed to be standalone games, you don't need to have played Kingdom to understand them, but they've got fun nods to players that have.

1

Thanks for this. It seems to have something for everyone, and the idea of punch lists sounds like what's sometimes missing to get from concerned / informed to actually effective.

4

Been working in software engineering for 5 years now, I still look this site up basically any time I don't remember what an http code means

8

Ive loved radio garden for a few years now. Its so fun to just click a random city in the world and just listen to whatever they are doing. I remember randomly listening to a music station from some island above scotland for an entire day and came out of it with like 10 bands i had never heard of before that are now a part of my rotation.

2

Don't know if it's still around and can't remember the domain, but there was a site called World Radio Network that rebroadcast shortwave radio from around the world. Also great for language learning. The Polish Radio Service and Vatican Radio even had programs in Esperanto. A Finnish station had a Latin program, and of course so did Vatican Radio.

2
ace_garpreply
lemmy.world

Lol. I haven't seen this since '98.

AFAIK there was a company producing a similar real product about 5-10 years ago.

7
Akasazhreply
lemmy.world

Yeah I love that it had a certain amount of credibility when released, mainly from the professional look of the page. But actually the implementability has increased over time with tech.

Yet it hasn't really lead to a cybersex revolution yet. My prediction at the time that something like this would definitely materialize in the next 25 years.

5

What do you mean? Teledildonics is very real. There's a lot of integration with SecondLife, but I certainly wouldn't know anything about that.

8

www.webtender.com

It's still the same same as it was almost 30 years ago and is an example of both how websites used to look and also shows how much more functional things used to be when implemented well, inspite of modern aesthetic evolutions

18
lemmy.world

mediaplate.au

I've been using it as my homepage. It allows you to search Google and other engines without AI summaries, it gives you your IP address and just enough weather info without being obtuse, it loads quickly, and has a timer, stopwatch, scratchpad and conversion table for imperial to metric ect.

12

Ayyy it is so awesome to see how much Australians are contributing to the cyber space, I have lost count of the amount of times I have seen Aussies being mentioned in just this past week

3
Shindo66reply
lemmy.world

This is amazing, it took me to a US battleship website and then enrons website

3

A good chuck of these sites are autism special interest sites.

Hey, would you like every single schematic of Chernobyl with a through explanation? Sites like that are floating around in there.

1

At the Nine Inch Nails concert in Lisbon, Portugal on February 12, 2007. a plain-looking USB flash drive was found in a bathroom stall. It was found to hold a single MP3 file with the title "My Violent Heart." In the ID3 tags of that file, a URL, anotherversionofthetruth.com, was found

That's cool as fuck. Never been a huge fan of their music, but I have grown to really respect Trent Reznor

3

I loved webrings!! I spent too much time on a Star Wars one. Learned how to meditate, but couldn't quite lift a pencil with my mind. Also learned way too many Ewok and Wookie family lineages that still take up too much space in my brain.

2

It was pretty much the only way to find stuff online before search sites started indexing everything. You either knew the site directly or you followed links from other sites to get there.

9

Oh shit I used to play these games all the time in school, thanks for the hit of nostalgia

2

https://posthog.com/ Its best on desktop or in desktop mode Its basically a recreation of a desktop with icons in the browser. Its super cool to just navigate around in.

8

Back in the late '90s there was a very early Flash-based website for a company called Eye4U. Looking at it today it's nothing special and even a little corny, but at the time it was mind-blowing. It was like nothing else on the web.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hOUw2tF7agM

6

turnmeintoagirl.com is a greatwebsite for all those transfems that still dont know they are trans.

6

Oh fuck oh shit I clicked it as a joke but it's legit how do I go back my knob and bollocks went inside and won't come back out!

1

despite being promoted on reddit quite a few times, nobody knows about lemmy. early on when reddit was banning on the explicit subs, some of us fled to an international forum that looks reddit, its relatively unknown, but it was discusisng "illicit stuff" i think it was an obscure canadia/EU sites, so the US cant force it to close down, sadly most of the people dispersed from that community long time ago.

another one as of recently is because of reddit bans, people fled to a forum that discuss how to evade it, and how they were banned from reddit.

5

According to the people in my office nobody knows about archive.org and I think it's pretty cool.

5
dustyDatareply
lemmy.world

It's a neat piece of satire. Turning the humans into AI. There's this saying that AI really means “actually Indians”. As many AI companies have been caught using humans, mostly outsourced offshore daily workers, to cover up for incomplete AI models, and agentic AI. So as to hide the fact that the tech is not actually all the way to what's promised, and actually depends on human labor to keep up the façade of advanced technology. This webpage drops the pretense altogether, to mock the state of the LLM bubble.

5
lemmy.world

I was on there in 2003 I think. Was on the forums a fair bit but haven't been back since 2005 or so.

2

It had some amazing things going on for a long while. I heard a lot of it fell apart around 2014 when the gold finally hit true hyperinflation and they tried to introduce a 3rd currency.

1

I wouldn't say unknown, as it's a staple of the shortwave and ham radio communities, but websdr.org is a place where people stream software defined radio feeds from around the world. It's not like a traditional internet radio station where you have an audio stream of a single station. You pick an SDR server hosted by a volunteer, and then you're given a frequency input, modulation selection, and waterfall display as though you were listening to an actual shortwave radio.

I know it's well-known because Eastern European stations were swamped during Russia's initial invasion of Ukraine in 2022.

4
bitjunkiereply
lemmy.world

Seems like they don't update often? It's still showing the Artemis II crew.

1

I honestly don't know. I always used the website as a start site. But not for a year or two. And whenever i looked at it it was like one or two. Which kinda made it even funnier

1
lemmy.world

If I tell you, then people will know about it, which is why I like it.

4
feddit.org

edupad.ch

Write collaboratively without account or registration. Just start a pad and send the link to your collaborators.

3

https://www.parapluesch.de/whiskystore/test.htm

(don't mind the URL, I don't know, I can't tell you why, but it leads to the game)

PARAPLÜSCH! The psyciatry ward for abused cuddlytoys!! It's such a sweet and at the same time disturbing game (I recommend playing on PC, not smartphone)

(You can select a number of languages, though it is originally german)

3

Weird Stuff/Age Regression

::: spoiler Tap for spoiler I don't recommend it now because it feels like a bunch of genAI stories are getting posted without seemingly any push back, but I used to enjoy finding some high quality stories on a site called ARArchive ( ararchive.com ).

The current modern site is a boring blue and white website. Replace the "www" with "old" and you get their old site/forums which was so much more lovely looking. Also, because of the forum type part of the site, alongside other features, was a bigger website.

The site itself, modern and old, contain stories centered around physical and/or mental age regression. Stories like "Boomerang" from OldStories, which is like a 4 chapter story about the misfortunes of a high schooler who gets physically regressed to 2 years old in a scenario where one day all 14-18 year olds in North America suddenly regress between 2-4 years old.

Or another favorite of mine: The Family by sumner. Follows a journalist who gets lost and has cat troubles but ends up in a town with a dark secret. Won't spoil anything past the description and very beginning of the story. 5 chapters and an interesting enough premise once you read more into it. :::

1

https://thewebb.io/

Its an LLM trained exclusively on the Epstein files, 9/11 archive and publicly available FBI documents. Every answer comes with like 10-20 Epstein filer links to prove or disprove a theory. Their free option is shit, but for like 20$ a month, it helps me make sense of all the videos out there.

1

NostraDavid's Warcraft Credit Visualizer

I wanted to check who worked on what World of Warcraft game, so I've vibe-coded this together, over the years. Not the data though - I didn't want hallucinated data.

Anyway, turns that one person worked on all the games: Glenn Stafford - the absolutely musical legend!

0

I gave it a try, and the first page was sponsored posts, then there was a AI summary

Looks like a scam site, wouldn't trust it

8
feddit.online

I can't make it public—then everyone will know about it. The server is small and can't handle the influx of requests.

-20
Gloomyreply
mander.xyz

This is Lemmy, mate. There will be 10 people looking at it max

18