Welcome to My Hyperlink Directory

All the various sites on the web are connected by Hyperlinks, which help you travel from webportal to webportal. Before you there stands my collection of these hyperlinks, gathered over the years. They are not necesarrily things I have an interest in, but things that I believe may present some use to someone at some point in the future.

Neocities

  • Friends
    • - Cidoku
    • - Cyberpunk Corner
    • - Cybertomboy
    • - didn't ask
    • - ISM Ring of Power
    • - i will never be happy
    • - Literature Girl
    • - Lyrical Tokarev
    • - Ongezell
    • - Page's Pages
    • - PLEURODELINAE
    • - PNN America
    • - sugarteara
    • - Temina
    • - Þe Satyrs’ Foreſt
    • - Volk's Valhalla (I hope he's alright)
    • - Webpage-1990-Colourised

  • Inspiring Website - [explanation[explanation]: You see, dear reader, these websites not only have an astounding sense of design, like most websites I tend to follow, but they have been instrumental in inspiring the style and design of this website. ]
    • - errormine
    • - Ongezell
    • - PLEURODELINAE
    • - Primordial Dungeon
    • - ribose
    • - SECRET GARDEN
    • - Þe Satyrs’ Foreſt
    • - Zeus of the Crows

  • Mutuals
    • - Abyssal
    • - amriel
    • - Angel's Roam
    • - AntiKrist
    • - Apnet
    • - Arkm's World
    • - arlita's internet page
    • - bean's bottles
    • - bruisedgh0st
    • - 𝖇𝖚𝖗𝖞𝖊𝖛𝖎𝖑
    • - cabbage sorter
    • - cat corner entryway
    • - Channel Onion
    • - Cidoku
    • - circuitghost
    • - connor7000
    • - Cyberpunk Corner
    • - Cybertomboy
    • - Dannarchy
    • - didn't ask
    • - electropsyoptica
    • - errormine
    • - exephile
    • - Family Guy Madness
    • - feeling machine.
    • - Fidomanin
    • - Flying with Quills
    • - HedgeWytchery
    • - i will never be happy
    • - imaginings.
    • - ISM Ring of Power
    • - Jerry Lehr's Shell
    • - Keltokel
    • - Lazy Bones
    • - The Literary Bisexual
    • - Literature Girl
    • - Lotus's Cube
    • - Lyrical Tokarev
    • - Melon King
    • - Mister Dizzy
    • - Moheb Rofail
    • - Monastery of St.Blamensir
    • - Motte Motte
    • - mutagensoup
    • - Myrrh
    • - New Digital Era
    • - The 0bserver
    • - Ongezell
    • - PAINTKILLER
    • - Page's Pages
    • - ⸸ pandæmonium ⸸
    • - PLEURODELINAE
    • - PNN America
    • - Preserved Figs
    • - Primordial Dungeon
    • - purinland
    • - RPGFAN54 (work in progress)
    • - Sable Cradle
    • - Schizopunk Media
    • - SECRET GARDEN
    • - SKULLMUND
    • - sleepy sage
    • - sugarteara (moved to feeling machine)
    • - Temina
    • - Þe Satyrs’ Foreſt
    • - TRAUMAKYABAJOU
    • - Unimaginable Heights
    • - Velvet Blue
    • - vincent's dungeon
    • - Volk's Valhalla
    • - The Vox Box
    • - Wave MBU
    • - Webpage-1990-Colourised
    • - Zeus of the Crows

Most Useful Websites

Across my journey as a webmaster, and general internet user, I found a few websites that I kept coming back to. These may be specific to my uses, however I find them to be the most useful websites (and tools) on the internet, and I am forever indebted to the people who created them and allowed them to flourish.

  • DaFont
    • The single largest archive of free (in part or fully) fonts on the internet.
  • Ezgif
    • You may not be able to appreciate how much gifs have shaped the internet, especially neocities. However, if you ever find yourself in need of a tool to make or edit one, this free website is by far the best.
  • Old Book Illustrations
  • From Old Books
    • This website, and the following one, are for certain the ones most applicable to me. However, if you feel like sprucing up your website, or some other form of craft, with the decorations of artists long departed from this world, these two are the prime places for it.
  • KH Insider
    • To my knowledge, the most comprehensive library of video game music out there. So particular I even find, now and then, pieces not even available on Youtube. Great resource for indie webmasters who enjoy to overuse autoplay music (like me).
  • WebAmp
  • SCM Player
    • Now that you have the music you plan to use, you need a player! However, as we know, the html audio tag often gets boring, or may not fit in with your style, or you may just want a greater library of songs on a single page! These two players have you covered, and they work fantastically, with plenty of themes to satiate your visual too.
  • Winamp Skin Museum
  • Custom Skins for SCM Player
    • Here are the aforementioned skins. However it is quite easy to make your own ones! Do give it a try!
  • Archive dot today
    • The truest website archive out there. It's library may not be as extensive as that of the Wayback Machine, however they swear by preserving the internet in it's true form, without bending to bad actors.
  • The Internet Archive
    • I have my personal gripes with the Internet Archive, specifically regarding censorship and removal of data on command from the Wayback Machine, however when you're under as much fire as they have been from litigious industries like the print publishing one it's hard to blame them (hard but not impossible). Very good public library, particularly of software.
  • My Abandonware
    • The largest library of "abandonware" video games, games whose publisher has gone bankrupt, or who have otherwise completely disregarded a piece of software, with no intent on protecting the rights to it.
  • GIMP - GNU Image Manipulation Software
    • The free open source replacement for Photoshop's image manipulation tools. I hold great disdain for Ad*be, and propietary software as a whole, so this has become like an old friend to me. Highly reliable. Do not try to draw a circle in it. Leave that for our next tool.
  • Krita
    • The field of digital art software is almost as bad as the one of browsers used to be (or God forbid, consoles in the 2000s), and I dare not approach the topic of which is best. However, amongst free open source digital art software, Krita reigns supreme.
  • Blender
    • The Krita of 3D. However, unlike Krita, blender is pretty much industry standard for 3D modelling. Use it with care.
  • Aseprite
    • The champion of pixel art software. Did you know Aseprite is free if you compile it yourself? It's not some "just pirate it bro" tip, it is intended by the developers! However, if you wish to support the developers, you can buy it from the official website.
  • Audacity
    • You see... I would include Audacity. It used to be the powerhouse of 2000-2010s amateur audio editing. And to some extent, those features are still there. However it has seen a very shameful fall from grace as of the new management. I plan to include the official page if it ever reverts to it's former, ad-less, microtransaction-less glory. Until then, install one of the older versions.
  • Waifu2x
    • For a long time, the controversy around AI used to be aimless anger. However, now, the problem is very much real, and the internet is filled with all sorts of AI slop. However, the early AI era produced some great tools, like this one. It uses an algorith to enlarge pictures, for when GIMP won't do the trick. It may, sometimes, make it look like the picture was AI made though, so use it at your own risk.
  • Libre Office
    • The best open source Office365 replacement. Does all that 365 does suprisingly well. Documents may sometimes have formatting issues when opened on their 365 counterpart though! Learned that from experience.
  • Overleaf
    • By far the best in-browser LaTeX editor. It has many templates and extensions available to use, all for free. It got me through many a paper.
  • OBS - Open Broadcaster Software
    • Another free and open source industry standard, OBS is streaming's saving grace. Without it, the industry would be quite impossible to exist in its current form. It has a load of free plug-ins too, and it never ceases to amaze me what people can do with it.
  • Stack Overflow
    • "Before me things create were none, save things
      Eternal, and eternal I endure.
      All hope abandon ye who enter here.
      ".
      This quote was etched above the gates of hell, in the first book of Dante Aligheri's Divine Comedy, Inferno. Something very similar must surely be inscribed in the html file of this forum, above it, just out of view of your browser. You may not see it, but its presence is felt. Such is the typical experience of looking to an answer for your coding problem and ending up here. However, sometimes (many times really, I am just being dramatic), you may find what you're seeking.
  • Neocities
    • The home of the personal web. ⇐YOU ARE HERE

AI/Machine Learning

Archival/Libraries

Legal Content

@Repth