Historical links are the accidental theme this week.
- RFC Reader. For those uncomfortable with plaintext? (via)
- The truth about C & Unix history. An oldie but goodie. (via)
- After several decades, there’s still no standard for querying registration data, surprisingly. There’s something coming together, though.
- Plan-55A, store and forward messaging – on paper. (via)
- 1980s sci-fi show openings. No fancy House of Hobbit Thrones catering to nerds back then… this was as good as it got. (via)
- Who named Silicon Valley? (via)
- Unix people cards. (via)
- Big Boring System, a text only online community, and another sort of throwback like tilde.club. (via)
- The Cryptographic Doom Principle. A clear explanation. (via)
- TL;DR-ify, a One Thing Well item. Happens to contain a paragraph-sized 40-year history of hypertext on the bottom of that page.
- Ping stories. I’ve linked to other versions before. (via)
- The history of grep. (via)
- The little book about OS development. (via)
- Decentralize All the Things! (via)
- That previous link took me to Gary Bernhardt’s Twitter feed, where I saw this pun. Also this truth.
- His site is destroyallsoftware.com. I like the ‘screencasts’ idea; much easier to watch than some person in a room staring into a camera.
- Also also found through that link: Sandstorm, a personal server setup. My initial impression is that it’s similar to Owncloud. I wish more people did this.
- Also also also: from Justin Cormack through Twitter: Unhosted.