Site in costruction

Exobrain

Home of inorganic intellectual chaos and unpolished content

Favourite Blogs

Note

This page is a list of sites i like.
Each entry is organized in the following format:

  • Short title

  • Main URL

  • About page

  • Themes ?

  • Personal tought

Specer Baugh’s blog

A simple, old school, web 1.0 blog with a good amount of very interesting posts (micro-essays ?) about pratical computing philosophy, including programming and system administration.

Julia Evans' blog

This blog is about - being delighted about programming - showing how topics traditionally considered “hard” and “scary” are actually accessible and interesting and fun (TCP! / Kernel hacking! / Traceroute! / gzip! / databases! / SSL!) - asking questions and getting better every day. - how being clear & curious & humble is better than sounding like I know it all already - experimenting with alternative ways to teach hard concepts (zines!)

Matt Might’s blog

Dr. Matthew Might has been A CS and Internal Medicine professor at the University of Alabama at Birmingham.
The articles on his blog cover various topics: life hacking, computing and programming languages theory and tips, academic life tips.

The Overflow

A blog from people at StackOverflow.

beepb00p’s Website

A very interesting content packed blog and exobrain.

Chuan Ji

A personal blog of a San Francisco engineer with a small but nice collection of articles.

public voit - Home page of Karl Voit

∑ Xah Code

A blog of the "ugly but damn interesting" type

David Gasquez’s Handbook

A very curated, long-form, exobrain.

My friends' websites

Alberto Ventafridda

Hi, I’m Alberto.

I’m a computer science student at UniMib, living in Milan, Italy. I like to work on projects that span the topics of cyber security, web development, and distributed systems, occasionally writing about the challenges I encounter.

Damiano Verzulli

I really like to spend time:

  • investigating networking news and problems (at least in LAN and small WAN environments; from Ethernet to IPv4, up to BGP);

  • improving my skills in system administration, expecially GNU/Linux environments;

  • getting my hands on top of current Web 2.0 development standards (I started enjoying AngularJS and Bootstrap one year ago, when I finally understood that Javascript is no more what I knew lots and lots of year ago…)

Marco Russo