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The best of the web. Right now these links are in no particular order and don't focus on any particular subject--I'll eventually organize them once I get enough to organize! Slashdot A necessity for the well-informed geek. Hackman's Realm Adam Luoranen shares his knowledge and opinions of electronics, software design, and the web. A great resource for easy-to-understand explainations and tutorials on a variety of topics. Jameco Electronics The absolute best place to buy electrical components online. Great prices, great selection, and great customer service. 6502.org A necessity for anyone working with the 6502 microprocessor. 6502.org has manuals, tutorials, and numerous reference documents. Science Toys An awesome website with tons of little mini science projects (most of them made from household items). Check it out. Binarysoft My business web site. Take a look...you might see something useful. Yahoo! Buzz Index A pretty cool site that tracks search rankings and displays short news articles based upon the highest movers. A cool way to sort out important headlines. Rob's corner of the web One man's attempt at interfacing with a computer monitor. Informative, but not exactly intuitive, a worthwhile browse nonetheless. Rickard's electronic projects page Rickard Gunée does a good job of documenting his several successful endeavors at creating video game systems from scratch. The Official Site of Benjamin J Heckendorn Notoriously creative and funny, Ben has hacked nearly every game console he can get his hands on and provides in-depth explainations of his craft. Worth it as much for the humor as for the cool pictures of custom-built portable systems. The W3C Markup Validation Service Is your website coded in valid XHTML? It should be! Go to the World Wide Web Consortum's validator and check, then post the graphic thingie they give you that says how well you coded your website and lets other people check to see if you indeed coded it in compliance with XHTML--keeps you on you toes, you know? Anyway, W3C also provides a similar CSS Validation Service and a handy Broken Link Checker--but those cost money. No! Of course not--they're free, too! Internet Archive Wayback Machine View archived versions of over 10 billion webpages from 1996 onward. Warning: archived material may contain excessive amounts of frames and/or extremely vibrant web-safe colors, view at your own risk ;)! |