What's a cool website you’ve visited that no one seems to know of?

TehBamski@lemmy.world to Ask Lemmy@lemmy.world – 372 points –
173

realtimecolors.com

Live testing color palettes and fonts for web design. Made by a designer who's really great, she runs a YouTube channel and made the site for free use by anyone.

How accurate are the palettes? Would we need to calibrate our monitors or does the site do that for you?

I doubt the site is able to calibrate to individual monitors, as there's almost no way for it to know what you have.

Gotcha. So not too accurate for uncalibrated monitors then. Thanks!

Are there tools like this that are accurate for uncalibrated monitors?

I'm not aware of any other than what I've used in the past in post production and that's ColorChecker Passport Photo 2 by Calibrite ($119.) It's a software that helps you calibrate your monitor so that you can get your edits accurate for print. It also comes with a physical colorchecker that you can use as well for multiple lighting situations. Great tool for photographers that do a lot of post.

I'm sure there's some software out there that is more affordable or free that you can calibrate your monitor with.

If you like to play chess, check out www.lichess.org

It's free and open source, and it's very easy to find a game there, no matter what level you play.

It doesn't display annoying ads.

It always makes me sad that chess.com was the site that blew up. I always had to convince my friends to use lichess when I played back in school.

All of the games ever played on lichess along with puzzles, evaluations etc are also open and free to download at database.lichess.org

The site's founder and lead developer Thibault also often streams the development of the site on his Twitch channel!

I'm honestly suprised sometimes at how free, open and transparent this site is, truly an inspiration for anyone looking to build an ethical platform.

https://neal.fun

A variety of neat activities and educational pages.

My goodness. I love this website's activities and educational pages. I really should be studying right now, but here are a few of my favorites so far.

https://neal.fun/lets-settle-this/

https://neal.fun/internet-artifacts/

https://neal.fun/life-checklist/

Plenty more to check out!

I feel like 35 is too young to have completed 51/66 tasks in the life checklist. I'm too young for a midlife crisis (fingers crossed, anyways)!

Yeah, I feel like it's heavily skewed towards the beginning of life, but tbf I feel like the cool things you do later in life are harder to quantify? Could add things like:

  • I'm trying to think of how to quantify a "Have 0 debt" option but like, post mortgage or something.
  • Establish a friend group
  • Hang out with at least one member of that friend group for 5 / 10 / 15 years
  • Go to an interesting location as part of your job (conventions count)
  • See a historical human-made artifact in person
  • See a legitimate dinosaur bone in person (not cast)
  • Visit your country's capital
  • Create a piece of art and enter it into something that has it be viewed by people outside your family / friends

56/74, little better now.

The have 0 debt one in your context would be like "pay off your mortgage" or for mortgage+ "pay off your mortgage early".

Maybe a "get sued for ethical reasons and win" (refused to allow a small business to defraud me, they tried to sue me and then backed off when they read my defense).

Have a humbling experience with a stranger.

The list also assumes that you'll have children which isn't really on the cards for some people (voluntary or involuntary) and cuts out the possibility of doing a huge chunk of that list.

Ian's Shoelace Site:
Different ways to lace your shoes.

The Phrontistery:
Glossaries of, e.g., obscure words, lost words, etc.

Anytime I get new shoes I go to Ian's Shoelace Site to pick out a new lacing pattern.

And Ian's Secure Knot is a godsend for winter boots that usually have a bit thicker laces which come undone with a regular knot. Learning that knot is great because it's as strong as double knotting without needing to pick apart the knot afterwards.

Gayhomophobe.com it counts the time since the last openly homophobic figure was caught in a gay sex scandal

Unfortunately the list seems to have become unmaintained.

Yeah. I can remember seeing a homophobic politician being caught at an orgy in the news just a few months ago.

www.5minute.games

It's a list of all the good word games, minigames and puzzles on the internet, and you can customize it to shortlist your favorites and even add new links. I go there every day to link to all my favorites.

...oh, full disclosure: I built it. Though hopefully nobody minds, since there's no ads or monetization whatsoever.

This is really great! Thank you for this!

You're welcome. Note the settings button, which gives some nice customization options. Feel free to share it with folks who might also enjoy it. :-)

Bookmarked this! Going to come in handy over the holidays especially. Thank you!!

http://wiby.me/ is a cool site. It's a search engine that only has web 1.0 and web 1.0-styled websites.

Oh my, this is beautiful. Brings me back to the glory days of the Internet -- when sites were quick to load, text was king, and you didn't feel your privacy was violated at every turn.

https://everynoise.com

Every music genre you can think of, and then some. I finally found out what the stuff I like is called.

This is how I found Die Partei, a great obscure German electronica artist

This is unbelievable, thanks for sharing!

The sample for "kids dance party" wasn't something I ever thought I'd hear again.

I might’ve came across it from a post here on Lemmy, but this website is great for music discovery. It lets you listen to music by decade and country via a neat map UI.

https://radiooooo.com/

userinyerface.com

Something that far too many managers and developers need to see, so they can better understand why their decisions and work completely sucks.

Send to Bottom

Help Bar Descends at the most pain inducing rate possible

Every step of the way has some new frustrating way to confound the user. I was laughing/crying halfway through the process because of how stupidly unfriendly the design was. Just brilliant. Whoever did this is an evil supergenius and/or heavily into BDSM.

Sent it to my partner who wants to get into Ux design, lol

I love and hate this, it really managed to raise my blood pressure.

There is this really cool place called Lemmy, I'm sure many people here have heard of it but not anyone I ask in other places. It's like Reddit, it's a forum-esque place where people can exchange their thoughts. The people are a little biased on the extreme Marxist side of things, but overall it's pretty nice.

The people are a little biased on the extreme Marxist side of things

(and we like it that way, tyvm)

It's one thing to have a dominant demographic, but any place could do without a black and white mindset when they go about it.

Is this like the digital equivalent of a million monkeys with a million typewriters?

Basically, except it's indexed and searchable. Somewhere in those books, exists the phrase, "dharma curious updooted glitchington on lemmy" probably many times. But also "dharma curious hated glitchingtons post on lemmy" will also be there somewhere.

Wait, it's already there? I thought they were generating them currently?

Also, it's searchable? I didn't notice that. Just hit random. Going to go check it again!

And also "every finite number is contained within PI" but with words.

That statement may be false, a simple explanation is that if you make a number out of π by removing all 9s it will keep the properties of π being infinite and non-repeating but never contain 9.

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This is equivalent to the assertion that pi is a normal number, which is not proven.

Okay, cool! I had some fun looking for words in the pages. But if I understand it correctly, what we'll end up with individual words surrounded with gibberish on the pages. You're never going to get a page full of real words, right?

Every possible page is generated somewhere. I think there's a checkbox on the search page that fills the rest of the query with spaces.

I haven't looked at it yet but if u understand correctly you just have to search for a page where surrounding gibberish is also words. Probability plummets to zero fast, I'd guess

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Yeah sorta. It's apparently an algorithm that can produce every possible page of text, given a number. So it contains a staggering amount of gibberish, plus every page of every book that's ever been written, and many wildly incorrect, many vaguely correct and one exactly accurate description of the circumstances of your death.

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I needed Unicode symbols for a story I'm working on. (I want to use them as "magic runes" so I could type them into a document, but without using the standard "runes" that are typically used.)

Shape Catcher let me draw what I was looking for and then get a list of Unicode characters that matched that drawing. It's not exact so if there's no perfect Unicode match, it will give you ones that are close. This actually turned out to my benefit as I found shapes I hadn't considered but which worked nicely for my uses.

Photoshop in your browser for free: https://www.photopea.com/

Another website with a similar goal: https://jspaint.app

It's a M$ Paint clone and I use it because I don't have Windows.

If by that you mean "I use Linux but can't stand GIMP" then Pinta is pretty good as a simple photo editor. More advanced than Paint but not as unfriendly as GIMP. If you're familiar with Paint.NET on Windows then you'll feel right at home.

I also used Pinta but don't remember what worked for me, Pinta or Krita. I use one of them mostly for making icons transparent. I just thought I'd also drop JSPaint here, that was the first one I found.

https://www.albinoblacksheep.com/

I still break out into Badger, badger, badger occasionally....

Plenty of people know about albionblacksheep.com It was a go-to website back in the early 2000's.

There are a lot of people here who weren't born back in the early 2000s

And in that same vein, I would like to nominate zombo.com

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This is my favourite website ever. Don't forget to visit the archive. The quality of this authors posts is astronomical. The way they explain extremely complex Systems in a simple and visual manner is absolutely brilliant.

I think the first post I found was the clock one and it's still my favourite

https://www.nonograms.org/

Very entertaining.

If you like this, you might enjoy 5minute.games, a list of lots of little games like this. Nonograms is one of the sites listed, and I keep it on my shortlist. Though I don't have patience for more than a 15x15 B/W puzzle.

...can you not make me feel like a fossil

I'm pretty sure everyone on Lemmy is exactly 37 years old, and grew up with ytmnd

http://thesneeze.com/

I really liked this blog like 10+ years ago.

He's got a lot of funny stuff on there where he eats unusual food, talks about a fungus growing on his trees, and other things he has observed. He even has an interview with Adam Savage!

He is also the none pizza left beef pizza guy.

Is it Steve! Don't eat it?

Yes, Steve, Don't Eat It! I think the first thing that I saw on his site was the FedEx logo thing, but Steve, Don't Eat It was the thing that kept me on the site.

Last.fm and tracking your music listening. I've seen a post here but no one I see irl seems to know about it

Scrobling used to be huge back in the day of mp3s and last.fm practically invented it.There are also alternative APIs implementing the same idea. Unfortunately for them they never caught up on the age of streaming.

MetaFilter! It's an old-school text-only community blog that's been around since 1999. I love the variety and depth of posts on the front page, and the AskMetaFilter Q+A section is super useful.

Metafilter has some good conversations and unique content for threads.

From the same era, and with similar interesting levels of content was kuro5hin.org (aka. corrosion , Now offine) and everything2.com (a massively interlinked set of nodes created before wikipedia).

What's the difference between this and any other link aggregator, like the one we're on now?

It's an organic community, small enough and long-lasting enough that it's easier to get to know people as people instead of as names on a screen you'll see once and likely never again. The admin team is similarly small and easy to talk to, not an algorithm or a faceless corporate enforcer. The mods are paid professionals funded largely by community donations. The site is also in the process of transitioning to a non-profit management, so less risk of selling out or enshittifying itself. I like the posting and commenting culture -- text-heavy, minimalist style, and a wide variety of topics often deeply researched and explored in lengthy posts by people passionate about the topic, rather than 24/7 outrage-bait headlines and viral videos. And the subsites are really fun -- I mentioned AskMeFi, but there's also a place to share one's music, personal projects, discuss media, organize meetups, etc. I also appreciate how the mods and guidelines take a strong stance against bigotry and microaggressions -- hate speech and spam are virtually unheard of. Very refreshing when the bigger platforms seem intent on pursuing growth at all costs and minimizing administrative overhead. Overall, a cozy, human-scale community that seems more and more like a throwback that we should be moving back to.

Isitnormal.com

This website used to be pretty good/interesting about 15 years ago. It slowly lost it's appeal for me, however, due to various reasons. It was a closely guarded secret for quite a long time for me too.

Hey, since you know of this, is there any chance you’ve also seen the “moon is manufactured” website? Something about how it was a message, and intentionally designed because how else could it perfectly eclipse the sun. Haven’t been able to turn it up since about 2014

Missed that one! While trying to look it up I did stumble on a "scientist" who claimed, before the moon landings, that the moon was plasma and not rock. They couldn't find him again for a follow up interview after the landing.

Very niche, but if you ever need to decode a simple oldschool encrypted/encoded text (caesar cipher, reverse alphabet, substitution cipher, morse code etc) for an AR game or whatever, Canonn Decryptor is amazing, being able to decode most cryptograms virtually automatically.

Drew's Script-O-Rama.

OG movie script/screenplay database.

Dudes been running this place since 95, which is doubly impressive that he never got popped for copyright shit. There was a pretty crazy stretch where he was releasing scripts before they were even produced. Like I got to read the actual screenplays for flicks like Intolerable Cruelty, Lost Highway (movie makes more sense as a screenplay, btw) and even Beavis and Butthead Do America before they even hit the theaters.

Spearfish Lake Tales by Wes Boyd. Really nice books written by someone who had a lifelong experience of writing. Start at the bottom (with the first story), and work upwards. This guy definitely died to early.

epguides.com - episode lists for a lot of shows - dramas, sitcoms, science fiction, etc.

australiantelevision.net - episode lists and guides for a bunch of Australian TV series as well.

Not something I visit often nowadays, but I still peruse Gamewinners via the Archive for cheat codes on PS2 era and older games. Gamefaqs has the faqs and walkthroughs, but gamewinners had the cheats. Kinda sad that the best equivalent to it nowadays is youtube videos showing exploits of games.

bruh.news - ai generated news headlines, pretty silly

The accept cookies always send you to the Never gonna get you down clip. Is this the silly part? Because if it is so it's pretty lame.

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https://prepaidcompare.net/

Let's you sort prepaid phone plans in the US. You can even sort by things like which carrier the mvno runs on or if it's unlimited slow data after your allocation.

It's wonderful!

levitated.net

GPL interactive flash animations.

This was fairly cutting edge around 98 or 2002 when I first saw it. Really clean.

Not sure how any of the levitated Flash content can be shown now, but it appears that the creator Jared Tarbell is creating new works at infinite.center under MIT licence.

These look to be some of the best digital artworks available today.

I recommend Ruffle for viewing Flash content in the modern day. It aims to be a full reimplementation of Flash in HTML5, available as a desktop app or browser extension. It's still in beta, so it can't play all flash files yet, but it works great for the vast majority (it seems to work for all the animations on that site). It even works on mobile.

I thought all flash content was lost and sealed, thanks for that link.