Cool links of the week
I collect cool, interesting links spread all over the web and share them here in weekly posts. Hope you enjoy!
Six years of Gemini. The protocol, not Google’s AI.
New Ensō, first public beta. A text editor without editing, which made some noise on the internet years ago.
zenta. Mindfulness without leaving the terminal.
Fediverse mascots on paper. Print, cut, fold and glue.
Nothing is worse than opening a blank page…. Or so it used to be. I think this kind of thing is more effective than any anti-AI propaganda at reducing Microsoft Word marketshare.
The 100 best films of the 21st century. The cool thing about this list, built from votes by 500+ Hollywood artists, is that you can mark which films you’ve already seen and, at the end, share a poster with your result. (I got 57/100.)
Vexilo. A website/game for identifying flags from around the world.
New LibreOffice 25.2 user guides. This kind of thing reminds me of the handbooks, manuals and guides that were expected from software in the 1990s–2000s. In a way, it matches LibreOffice’s… “classic,” let’s say, visual style.
Glass3D generator. A CSS “glass background” generator, almost identical to Apple’s Liquid Glass.
Bubbles! A little browser game for popping bubbles. Looks easy, doesn’t it?
The Thiings Collection. A collection of… things, in beautiful illustrations with specific information. You can download the images and create your own collection of… things.
Nothing Headphone(1). Has a… different design. Not sure if I like it or not. Launches on July 15th for USD 299.
Anti-Subscription Catalogue. Over a hundred free, open-source and/or one-time purchase software options, divided into 16 categories.
Cute cars 🚗⭐. Looks like a 1990s website, but was made recently, as you can tell from some of the modern car models.
Your Roku has secret menus and screens — here’s how to unlock them. Nothing too useful, but still interesting.
Prettier Email Headers. Paste a “raw” email and see the headers in a nice format. Uses artificial intelligence, according to the developers.
Pathfinder. This site displays connections between two topics. (Tip: drag one over the other and see what happens.)