Some things I found interesting from 2025-07-20 to 2025-07-27
Internet Discoveries between 20 and 27 July
- 16colo.rs - ANSI/ASCII art archive
- Do not download the app, use the website
- Record and share your terminal sessions, the simple way - asciinema.org
- This Major Rule About Cooking Meat Turns out to Be Wrong
- BGP.Tools
- Antithesis: autonomous software testing
- Virtual Backgrounds - NASA
Interesting details
16colo.rs - ANSI/ASCII art archive - 16colo.rs is an archive of ANSI and ASCII art. Preserving artpacks released through the BBS underground artscene since the early 1990s until the present.
Do not download the app, use the website - Apps often demand excessive permissions, accessing your contacts, location, and more. Discover why sticking to your browser offers better privacy and control.
Fecking apps … most of the time. Whilst I agree with this part in principle, it’s not true in every case for me. Sometimes an app is actually better for me, most of the time the website is perfect.
Some good conversation at HN on this: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=44689059
Record and share your terminal sessions, the simple way - asciinema.org - None
This Major Rule About Cooking Meat Turns out to Be Wrong - The traditional wisdom says resting meat keeps it juicy. But when we put that idea to the test, we found a different reason to rest—one that has nothing to do with juice.
BGP.Tools - bgp.tools allows you to do bgp debugging and gives insight into internet routing with ease in a user friendly way
Antithesis: autonomous software testing - Spend less time worrying about bugs. Leave that to us. Our platform continuously searches your software for problems, enabling efficient debugging of the most complex issues.
Virtual Backgrounds - NASA - Download NASA backgrounds for your virtual meetings.
All this was saved to my Link Ace over the week
Explore other related articles:
art /
ascii /
data /
mobile /
privacy /
ascii /
cli /
terminal /
science /
network /
tools /
automation /
testing /
fun /
space /
Penned by Paul Macdonnell on 2025-07-27
Things do, stuffs get