From 7fa615558454c44b35c0babdb89c668de42ad0f6 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001
From: Paul Buetow
Date: Sun, 11 Jan 2026 10:39:31 +0200
Subject: Update content for html
---
about/resources.html | 204 ++++++++---------
about/showcase.html | 459 +++++++++++++++++++------------------
about/showcase/debroid/image-1.png | 106 ++++-----
3 files changed, 386 insertions(+), 383 deletions(-)
(limited to 'about')
diff --git a/about/resources.html b/about/resources.html
index 467529e1..66f68843 100644
--- a/about/resources.html
+++ b/about/resources.html
@@ -50,112 +50,112 @@
In random order:
-
21st Century C: C Tips from the New School; Ben Klemens; O'Reilly
-
The Practise of System and Network Administration; Thomas A. Limoncelli, Christina J. Hogan, Strata R. Chalup; Addison-Wesley Professional Pro Git; Scott Chacon, Ben Straub; Apress
-
Effective Java; Joshua Bloch; Addison-Wesley Professional
+
Distributed Systems: Principles and Paradigms; Andrew S. Tanenbaum; Pearson
Systemprogrammierung in Go; Frank Müller; dpunkt
-
Tmux 2: Productive Mouse-free Development; Brain P. Hogan; The Pragmatic Programmers
-
DNS and BIND; Cricket Liu; O'Reilly
-
The Kubernetes Book; Nigel Poulton; Unabridged Audiobook
-
Funktionale Programmierung; Peter Pepper; Springer
-
Chaos Engineering - System Resiliency in Practice; Casey Rosenthal and Nora Jones; eBook
-
Ultimate Go Notebook; Bill Kennedy
-
The Docker Book; James Turnbull; Kindle
+
DevOps And Site Reliability Engineering Handbook; Stephen Fleming; Audible
+
Learn You a Haskell for Great Good!; Miran Lipovaca; No Starch Press
Kubernetes Cookbook; Sameer Naik, Sébastien Goasguen, Jonathan Michaux; O'Reilly
-
Data Science at the Command Line; Jeroen Janssens; O'Reilly
+
C++ Programming Language; Bjarne Stroustrup;
+
The Kubernetes Book; Nigel Poulton; Unabridged Audiobook
+
Object-Oriented Programming with ANSI-C; Axel-Tobias Schreiner
+
Polished Ruby Programming; Jeremy Evans; Packt Publishing
+
97 things every SRE should know; Emil Stolarsky, Jaime Woo; O'Reilly
The KCNA (Kubernetes and Cloud Native Associate) Book; Nigel Poulton
-
Leanring eBPF; Liz Rice; O'Reilly
+
Seeking SRE: Conversations About Running Production Systems at Scale; David N. Blank-Edelman; eBook
+
The Docker Book; James Turnbull; Kindle
+
Effective Java; Joshua Bloch; Addison-Wesley Professional
+
Higher Order Perl; Mark Dominus; Morgan Kaufmann
+
Perl New Features; Joshua McAdams, brian d foy; Perl School
Learn You Some Erlang for Great Good; Fred Herbert; No Starch Press
-
Modern Perl; Chromatic ; Onyx Neon Press
-
Java ist auch eine Insel; Christian Ullenboom;
-
Think Raku (aka Think Perl 6); Laurent Rosenfeld, Allen B. Downey; O'Reilly
+
The Practise of System and Network Administration; Thomas A. Limoncelli, Christina J. Hogan, Strata R. Chalup; Addison-Wesley Professional Pro Git; Scott Chacon, Ben Straub; Apress
+
Developing Games in Java; David Brackeen and others...; New Riders
+
21st Century C: C Tips from the New School; Ben Klemens; O'Reilly
+
The DevOps Handbook; Gene Kim, Jez Humble, Patrick Debois, John Willis; Audible
+
Leanring eBPF; Liz Rice; O'Reilly
Raku Recipes; J.J. Merelo; Apress
-
Object-Oriented Programming with ANSI-C; Axel-Tobias Schreiner
-
Perl New Features; Joshua McAdams, brian d foy; Perl School
-
The Go Programming Language; Alan A. A. Donovan; Addison-Wesley Professional
-
DevOps And Site Reliability Engineering Handbook; Stephen Fleming; Audible
+
Ultimate Go Notebook; Bill Kennedy
+
Clusterbau mit Linux-HA; Michael Schwartzkopff; O'Reilly
+
Programming Perl aka "The Camel Book"; Tom Christiansen, brian d foy, Larry Wall & Jon Orwant; O'Reilly
+
Concurrency in Go; Katherine Cox-Buday; O'Reilly
+
Think Raku (aka Think Perl 6); Laurent Rosenfeld, Allen B. Downey; O'Reilly
Amazon Web Services in Action; Michael Wittig and Andreas Wittig; Manning Publications
-
The DevOps Handbook; Gene Kim, Jez Humble, Patrick Debois, John Willis; Audible
+
Modern Perl; Chromatic ; Onyx Neon Press
100 Go Mistakes and How to Avoid Them; Teiva Harsanyi; Manning Publications
+
Tmux 2: Productive Mouse-free Development; Brain P. Hogan; The Pragmatic Programmers
+
Hands-on Infrastructure Monitoring with Prometheus; Joel Bastos, Pedro Araujo; Packt
+
Funktionale Programmierung; Peter Pepper; Springer
+
DNS and BIND; Cricket Liu; O'Reilly
Go Brain Teasers - Exercise Your Mind; Miki Tebeka; The Pragmatic Programmers
-
Site Reliability Engineering; How Google runs production systems; O'Reilly
-
Developing Games in Java; David Brackeen and others...; New Riders
-
97 things every SRE should know; Emil Stolarsky, Jaime Woo; O'Reilly
+
The Pragmatic Programmer; David Thomas; Addison-Wesley
Terraform Cookbook; Mikael Krief; Packt Publishing
-
Programming Perl aka "The Camel Book"; Tom Christiansen, brian d foy, Larry Wall & Jon Orwant; O'Reilly
-
Polished Ruby Programming; Jeremy Evans; Packt Publishing
-
Learn You a Haskell for Great Good!; Miran Lipovaca; No Starch Press
-
Concurrency in Go; Katherine Cox-Buday; O'Reilly
-
Higher Order Perl; Mark Dominus; Morgan Kaufmann
-
Systems Performance Tuning; Gian-Paolo D. Musumeci and others...; O'Reilly
-
Seeking SRE: Conversations About Running Production Systems at Scale; David N. Blank-Edelman; eBook
-
Hands-on Infrastructure Monitoring with Prometheus; Joel Bastos, Pedro Araujo; Packt
-
Distributed Systems: Principles and Paradigms; Andrew S. Tanenbaum; Pearson
Effective awk programming; Arnold Robbins; O'Reilly
Raku Fundamentals; Moritz Lenz; Apress
+
Systems Performance Tuning; Gian-Paolo D. Musumeci and others...; O'Reilly
Pro Puppet; James Turnbull, Jeffrey McCune; Apress
-
The Pragmatic Programmer; David Thomas; Addison-Wesley
-
C++ Programming Language; Bjarne Stroustrup;
+
Java ist auch eine Insel; Christian Ullenboom;
+
Data Science at the Command Line; Jeroen Janssens; O'Reilly
+
Chaos Engineering - System Resiliency in Practice; Casey Rosenthal and Nora Jones; eBook
+
The Go Programming Language; Alan A. A. Donovan; Addison-Wesley Professional
Programming Ruby 3.3 (5th Edition); Noel Rappin, with Dave Thomas; The Pragmatic Bookshelf
-
Clusterbau mit Linux-HA; Michael Schwartzkopff; O'Reilly
+
Site Reliability Engineering; How Google runs production systems; O'Reilly
Technical references
I didn't read them from the beginning to the end, but I am using them to look up things. The books are in random order:
-
Relayd and Httpd Mastery; Michael W Lucas
-
Groovy Kurz & Gut; Joerg Staudemeier; O'Reilly
-
Go: Design Patterns for Real-World Projects; Mat Ryer; Packt
-
The Linux Programming Interface; Michael Kerrisk; No Starch Press
+
BPF Performance Tools - Linux System and Application Observability, Brendan Gregg; Addison Wesley
Algorithms; Robert Sedgewick, Kevin Wayne; Addison Wesley
-
Understanding the Linux Kernel; Daniel P. Bovet, Marco Cesati; O'Reilly
Implementing Service Level Objectives; Alex Hidalgo; O'Reilly
-
BPF Performance Tools - Linux System and Application Observability, Brendan Gregg; Addison Wesley
+
The Linux Programming Interface; Michael Kerrisk; No Starch Press
+
Go: Design Patterns for Real-World Projects; Mat Ryer; Packt
+
Relayd and Httpd Mastery; Michael W Lucas
+
Understanding the Linux Kernel; Daniel P. Bovet, Marco Cesati; O'Reilly
+
Groovy Kurz & Gut; Joerg Staudemeier; O'Reilly
Self-development and soft-skills books
In random order:
-
Getting Things Done; David Allen
-
The Phoenix Project - A Novel About IT, DevOps, and Helping your Business Win; Gene Kim and Kevin Behr; Trade Select
-
The Complete Software Developer's Career Guide; John Sonmez; Unabridged Audiobook
-
So Good They Can't Ignore You; Cal Newport; Business Plus
-
Buddah and Einstein walk into a Bar; Guy Joseph Ale, Claire Bloom; Blackstone Publishing
-
Stop starting, start finishing; Arne Roock; Lean-Kanban University
-
The Software Engineer's Guidebook: Navigating senior, tech lead, and staff engineer positions at tech companies and startups; Gergely Orosz; Audiobook
-
Meditation for Mortals, Oliver Burkeman, Audiobook
-
Time Management for System Administrators; Thomas A. Limoncelli; O'Reilly
Influence without Authority; A. Cohen, D. Bradford; Wiley
-
Psycho-Cybernetics; Maxwell Maltz; Perigee Books
-
Eat That Frog; Brian Tracy
-
97 Things Every Engineering Manager Should Know; Camille Fournier; Audiobook
+
The Software Engineer's Guidebook: Navigating senior, tech lead, and staff engineer positions at tech companies and startups; Gergely Orosz; Audiobook
+
Ultralearning; Anna Laurent; Self-published via Amazon
+
Never Split the Difference; Chris Voss, Tahl Raz; Random House Business
+
Ultralearning; Scott Young; Thorsons
+
The Good Enough Job; Simone Stolzoff; Ebury Edge
+
Atomic Habits; James Clear; Random House Business
+
So Good They Can't Ignore You; Cal Newport; Business Plus
Solve for Happy; Mo Gawdat (RE-READ 1ST TIME)
-
Deep Work; Cal Newport; Piatkus
The Off Switch; Mark Cropley; Virgin Books (RE-READ 1ST TIME)
-
Soft Skills; John Sommez; Manning Publications
-
Digital Minimalism; Cal Newport; Portofolio Penguin
+
Coders at Work - Reflections on the craft of programming, Peter Seibel and Mitchell Dorian et al., Audiobook
+
The Phoenix Project - A Novel About IT, DevOps, and Helping your Business Win; Gene Kim and Kevin Behr; Trade Select
+
The Power of Now; Eckhard Tolle; Yellow Kite
+
The Daily Stoic; Ryan Holiday, Stephen Hanselman; Profile Books
+
The Obstacle Is The Way; Ryan Holiday; Profile Books Ltd
+
Meditation for Mortals, Oliver Burkeman, Audiobook
+
Who Moved My Cheese?; Dr. Spencer Johnson; Vermilion
+
The Bullet Journal Method; Ryder Carroll; Fourth Estate
The Joy of Missing Out; Christina Crook; New Society Publishers
-
Slow Productivity; Cal Newport; Penguin Random House
+
Buddah and Einstein walk into a Bar; Guy Joseph Ale, Claire Bloom; Blackstone Publishing
Staff Engineer: Leadership beyond the management track; Will Larson; Audiobook
+
Eat That Frog; Brian Tracy
Eat That Frog!; Brian Tracy; Hodder Paperbacks
-
The Obstacle Is The Way; Ryan Holiday; Profile Books Ltd
-
Who Moved My Cheese?; Dr. Spencer Johnson; Vermilion
-
Atomic Habits; James Clear; Random House Business
-
Search Inside Yourself - The Unexpected path to Achieving Success, Happiness (and World Peace); Chade-Meng Tan, Daniel Goleman, Jon Kabat-Zinn; HarperOne
-
The Daily Stoic; Ryan Holiday, Stephen Hanselman; Profile Books
-
The Power of Now; Eckhard Tolle; Yellow Kite
-
Consciousness: A Very Short Introduction; Susan Blackmore; Oxford Uiversity Press
-
Coders at Work - Reflections on the craft of programming, Peter Seibel and Mitchell Dorian et al., Audiobook
+
Psycho-Cybernetics; Maxwell Maltz; Perigee Books
+
Stop starting, start finishing; Arne Roock; Lean-Kanban University
+
The Complete Software Developer's Career Guide; John Sonmez; Unabridged Audiobook
+
Digital Minimalism; Cal Newport; Portofolio Penguin
+
The 7 Habits Of Highly Effective People; Stephen R. Covey; Simon & Schuster UK
101 Essays that change the way you think; Brianna Wiest; Audiobook
+
97 Things Every Engineering Manager Should Know; Camille Fournier; Audiobook
+
Slow Productivity; Cal Newport; Penguin Random House
The Courage to Be Disliked; Ichiro Kishimi and Fumitake Koga; Audiobook
-
Ultralearning; Anna Laurent; Self-published via Amazon
-
The Good Enough Job; Simone Stolzoff; Ebury Edge
-
The 7 Habits Of Highly Effective People; Stephen R. Covey; Simon & Schuster UK
-
The Bullet Journal Method; Ryder Carroll; Fourth Estate
-
Never Split the Difference; Chris Voss, Tahl Raz; Random House Business
-
Ultralearning; Scott Young; Thorsons
+
Time Management for System Administrators; Thomas A. Limoncelli; O'Reilly
+
Consciousness: A Very Short Introduction; Susan Blackmore; Oxford Uiversity Press
+
Deep Work; Cal Newport; Piatkus
+
Search Inside Yourself - The Unexpected path to Achieving Success, Happiness (and World Peace); Chade-Meng Tan, Daniel Goleman, Jon Kabat-Zinn; HarperOne
@@ -164,31 +164,31 @@
Some of these were in-person with exams; others were online learning lectures only. In random order:
-
AWS Immersion Day; Amazon; 1-day interactive online training
+
Apache Tomcat Best Practises; 3-day on-site training
+
Red Hat Certified System Administrator; Course + certification (Although I had the option, I decided not to take the next course as it is more effective to self learn what I need)
+
MySQL Deep Dive Workshop; 2-day on-site training
+
Algorithms Video Lectures; Robert Sedgewick; O'Reilly Online
+
Structure and Interpretation of Computer Programs; Harold Abelson and more...;
+
The Well-Grounded Rubyist Video Edition; David. A. Black; O'Reilly Online
Ultimate Go Programming; Bill Kennedy; O'Reilly Online
+
Cloud Operations on AWS - Learn how to configure, deploy, maintain, and troubleshoot your AWS environments; 3-day online live training with labs; Amazon
+
Protocol buffers; O'Reilly Online
The Ultimate Kubernetes Bootcamp; School of Devops; O'Reilly Online
-
The Well-Grounded Rubyist Video Edition; David. A. Black; O'Reilly Online
-
Red Hat Certified System Administrator; Course + certification (Although I had the option, I decided not to take the next course as it is more effective to self learn what I need)
+
AWS Immersion Day; Amazon; 1-day interactive online training
+
Developing IaC with Terraform (with Live Lessons); O'Reilly Online
Functional programming lecture; Remote University of Hagen
-
Protocol buffers; O'Reilly Online
F5 Loadbalancers Training; 2-day on-site training; F5, Inc.
-
Cloud Operations on AWS - Learn how to configure, deploy, maintain, and troubleshoot your AWS environments; 3-day online live training with labs; Amazon
Linux Security and Isolation APIs Training; Michael Kerrisk; 3-day on-site training
-
Algorithms Video Lectures; Robert Sedgewick; O'Reilly Online
Scripting Vim; Damian Conway; O'Reilly Online
-
Structure and Interpretation of Computer Programs; Harold Abelson and more...;
-
Developing IaC with Terraform (with Live Lessons); O'Reilly Online
-
Apache Tomcat Best Practises; 3-day on-site training
-
MySQL Deep Dive Workshop; 2-day on-site training
Technical guides
These are not whole books, but guides (smaller or larger) which I found very useful. in random order:
+
Advanced Bash-Scripting Guide
How CPUs work at https://cpu.land
Raku Guide at https://raku.guide
-
Advanced Bash-Scripting Guide
Podcasts
@@ -197,59 +197,59 @@
In random order:
-
The Changelog Podcast(s)
+
Hidden Brain
+
Pratical AI
Maintainable
Fallthrough [Golang]
-
Hidden Brain
+
Backend Banter
Wednesday Wisdom
-
Dev Interrupted
-
Pratical AI
Fork Around And Find Out
-
The ProdCast (Google SRE Podcast)
-
The Pragmatic Engineer Podcast
-
Backend Banter
Cup o' Go [Golang]
Deep Questions with Cal Newport
-
BSD Now [BSD]
+
The Pragmatic Engineer Podcast
+
The ProdCast (Google SRE Podcast)
Modern Mentor
+
Dev Interrupted
+
BSD Now [BSD]
+
The Changelog Podcast(s)
Podcasts I liked
I liked them but am not listening to them anymore. The podcasts have either "finished" (no more episodes) or I stopped listening to them due to time constraints or a shift in my interests.
-
CRE: Chaosradio Express [german]
Ship It (predecessor of Fork Around And Find Out)
-
Java Pub House
-
Modern Mentor
Go Time (predecessor of fallthrough)
FLOSS weekly
+
CRE: Chaosradio Express [german]
+
Modern Mentor
+
Java Pub House
Newsletters I like
This is a mix of tech and non-tech newsletters I am subscribed to. In random order:
+
Monospace Mentor
+
The Pragmatic Engineer
+
Register Spill
+
Changelog News
+
VK Newsletter
The Valuable Dev
-
Ruby Weekly
Applied Go Weekly Newsletter
-
Golang Weekly
-
Changelog News
+
Ruby Weekly
Andreas Brandhorst Newsletter (Sci-Fi author)
-
The Imperfectionist
byteSizeGo
-
Monospace Mentor
-
Register Spill
-
VK Newsletter
-
The Pragmatic Engineer
+
Golang Weekly
+
The Imperfectionist
Magazines I like(d)
This is a mix of tech I like(d). I may not be a current subscriber, but now and then, I buy an issue. In random order:
-Generated on: 2026-01-01
+Generated on: 2026-01-08
This page showcases my side projects, providing an overview of what each project does, its technical implementation, and key metrics. Each project summary includes information about the programming languages used, development activity, and licensing. The projects are ranked by score, which combines project size and recent activity.
💻 Languages: Go (65.0%), Shell (22.5%), JSON (12.5%)
-
📚 Documentation: Markdown (98.4%), Text (1.6%)
-
📊 Commits: 13
-
📈 Lines of Code: 3781
-
📄 Lines of Documentation: 3664
-
📅 Development Period: 2025-12-30 to 2025-12-31
-
🏆 Score: 1602.0 (combines code size and activity)
-
⚖️ License: No license found
-
🧪 Status: Experimental (no releases yet)
-
-
-
-
-**Epimetheus** is a Go tool for pushing metrics to Prometheus that uniquely supports both realtime and historic data ingestion. Named after Prometheus's brother (meaning "afterthought"), it solves the common problem of getting metrics into Prometheus *after* they were collected—whether from hours, days, or weeks ago. It offers four operating modes: realtime (via Pushgateway), historic (single past datapoint via Remote Write API), backfill (range of historic data), and auto (intelligent routing based on timestamp age).
-
-The architecture routes current data (<5 min old) through Pushgateway where Prometheus scrapes it, while historic data goes directly to Prometheus via the Remote Write API to preserve original timestamps. It supports CSV and JSON input formats, generates realistic test metrics (counters, gauges, histograms), and includes a Grafana dashboard. The tool is built with a clean internal structure separating config, metrics generation, parsing, and ingestion concerns—making it useful for backfilling gaps, data migration, testing monitoring setups, and ad-hoc troubleshooting scenarios.
-
-View on Codeberg
-View on GitHub
-
----
-
-
💻 Languages: Go (63.6%), Shell (24.3%), JSON (12.2%)
+
📚 Documentation: Markdown (98.5%), Text (1.5%)
+
📊 Commits: 16
+
📈 Lines of Code: 3869
+
📄 Lines of Documentation: 3700
+
📅 Development Period: 2025-12-30 to 2026-01-06
+
🏆 Score: 393.4 (combines code size and activity)
+
⚖️ License: No license found
+
🧪 Status: Experimental (no releases yet)
+
+
+
+
+**Epimetheus** is a Go tool for pushing metrics to Prometheus that uniquely supports both realtime and historic data ingestion. Named after Prometheus's brother (meaning "afterthought"), it solves the common problem of getting metrics into Prometheus *after* they were collected—whether from hours, days, or weeks ago. It offers four operating modes: realtime (via Pushgateway), historic (single past datapoint via Remote Write API), backfill (range of historic data), and auto (intelligent routing based on timestamp age).
+
+The architecture routes current data (<5 min old) through Pushgateway where Prometheus scrapes it, while historic data goes directly to Prometheus via the Remote Write API to preserve original timestamps. It supports CSV and JSON input formats, generates realistic test metrics (counters, gauges, histograms), and includes a Grafana dashboard. The tool is built with a clean internal structure separating config, metrics generation, parsing, and ingestion concerns—making it useful for backfilling gaps, data migration, testing monitoring setups, and ad-hoc troubleshooting scenarios.
+
+View on Codeberg
+View on GitHub
+
+---
+
4. perc
@@ -173,7 +173,7 @@
📈 Lines of Code: 452
📄 Lines of Documentation: 80
📅 Development Period: 2025-11-25 to 2025-11-25
-
🏆 Score: 70.7 (combines code size and activity)
+
🏆 Score: 59.2 (combines code size and activity)
⚖️ License: No license found
🏷️ Latest Release: v0.1.0 (2025-11-25)
@@ -196,7 +196,7 @@
📈 Lines of Code: 28331
📄 Lines of Documentation: 562
📅 Development Period: 2025-08-01 to 2025-11-03
-
🏆 Score: 45.0 (combines code size and activity)
+
🏆 Score: 41.9 (combines code size and activity)
⚖️ License: No license found
🏷️ Latest Release: v0.15.3 (2025-11-03)
@@ -221,7 +221,7 @@
📈 Lines of Code: 3408
📄 Lines of Documentation: 82
📅 Development Period: 2025-10-01 to 2025-10-24
-
🏆 Score: 40.7 (combines code size and activity)
+
🏆 Score: 37.5 (combines code size and activity)
⚖️ License: No license found
🏷️ Latest Release: v0.3.0 (2025-10-24)
@@ -246,7 +246,7 @@
📈 Lines of Code: 10075
📄 Lines of Documentation: 2432
📅 Development Period: 2025-06-23 to 2025-12-31
-
🏆 Score: 27.1 (combines code size and activity)
+
🏆 Score: 25.8 (combines code size and activity)
⚖️ License: BSD-2-Clause
🏷️ Latest Release: v0.11.0 (2025-12-31)
@@ -269,7 +269,7 @@
📈 Lines of Code: 12003
📄 Lines of Documentation: 361
📅 Development Period: 2025-07-14 to 2025-08-02
-
🏆 Score: 24.9 (combines code size and activity)
+
🏆 Score: 23.8 (combines code size and activity)
⚖️ License: MIT
🏷️ Latest Release: v0.7.5 (2025-08-02)
@@ -296,7 +296,7 @@
📈 Lines of Code: 1902
📄 Lines of Documentation: 423
📅 Development Period: 2023-01-02 to 2025-11-01
-
🏆 Score: 24.6 (combines code size and activity)
+
🏆 Score: 23.3 (combines code size and activity)
⚖️ License: Custom License
🏷️ Latest Release: v0.2.0 (2025-10-21)
@@ -310,7 +310,30 @@
---
-
10. tasksamurai
+
10. timr
+
+
+
💻 Languages: Go (96.0%), Shell (4.0%)
+
📚 Documentation: Markdown (100.0%)
+
📊 Commits: 32
+
📈 Lines of Code: 1538
+
📄 Lines of Documentation: 99
+
📅 Development Period: 2025-06-25 to 2026-01-02
+
🏆 Score: 20.7 (combines code size and activity)
+
⚖️ License: MIT
+
🏷️ Latest Release: v0.3.0 (2026-01-02)
+
+
+timr is a minimalist command-line stopwatch timer written in Go that helps developers track time spent on tasks. It provides a persistent timer that saves state to disk, allowing you to start, stop, pause, and resume time tracking across terminal sessions. The tool supports multiple viewing modes including a standard status display (with formatted or raw output in seconds/minutes), a live full-screen view with keyboard controls, and specialized output for shell prompt integration.
+
+The architecture is straightforward: it's a Go-based CLI application that persists timer state to the filesystem, enabling continuous tracking even when the program isn't actively running. Key features include basic timer controls (start/stop/continue/reset), flexible status reporting formats for automation, and fish shell integration that displays a color-coded timer icon and elapsed time directly in your prompt—making it effortless to keep track of how long you've been working without context switching.
+
+View on Codeberg
+View on GitHub
+
+---
+
+
11. tasksamurai
💻 Languages: Go (99.8%), YAML (0.2%)
@@ -319,7 +342,7 @@
📈 Lines of Code: 6168
📄 Lines of Documentation: 164
📅 Development Period: 2025-06-19 to 2025-11-02
-
🏆 Score: 20.6 (combines code size and activity)
+
🏆 Score: 19.8 (combines code size and activity)
⚖️ License: BSD-2-Clause
🏷️ Latest Release: v0.9.3 (2025-10-05)
@@ -337,7 +360,7 @@
---
-
11. ior
+
12. ior
💻 Languages: Go (50.4%), C (43.1%), Raku (4.5%), Make (1.1%), C/C++ (1.0%)
@@ -346,7 +369,7 @@
📈 Lines of Code: 13072
📄 Lines of Documentation: 680
📅 Development Period: 2024-01-18 to 2025-10-09
-
🏆 Score: 20.3 (combines code size and activity)
+
🏆 Score: 19.6 (combines code size and activity)
⚖️ License: No license found
🧪 Status: Experimental (no releases yet)
@@ -364,29 +387,6 @@
---
-
12. timr
-
-
-
💻 Languages: Go (94.5%), Shell (5.5%)
-
📚 Documentation: Markdown (100.0%)
-
📊 Commits: 31
-
📈 Lines of Code: 991
-
📄 Lines of Documentation: 50
-
📅 Development Period: 2025-06-25 to 2025-11-08
-
🏆 Score: 19.8 (combines code size and activity)
-
⚖️ License: BSD-2-Clause
-
🏷️ Latest Release: v0.3.0 (2025-11-08)
-
-
-timr is a minimalist command-line stopwatch timer written in Go that helps developers track time spent on tasks. It provides a persistent timer that saves state to disk, allowing you to start, stop, pause, and resume time tracking across terminal sessions. The tool supports multiple viewing modes including a standard status display (with formatted or raw output in seconds/minutes), a live full-screen view with keyboard controls, and specialized output for shell prompt integration.
-
-The architecture is straightforward: it's a Go-based CLI application that persists timer state to the filesystem, enabling continuous tracking even when the program isn't actively running. Key features include basic timer controls (start/stop/continue/reset), flexible status reporting formats for automation, and fish shell integration that displays a color-coded timer icon and elapsed time directly in your prompt—making it effortless to keep track of how long you've been working without context switching.
-
-View on Codeberg
-View on GitHub
-
----
-
13. dtail
@@ -396,7 +396,7 @@
📈 Lines of Code: 20091
📄 Lines of Documentation: 5674
📅 Development Period: 2020-01-09 to 2025-06-20
-
🏆 Score: 18.8 (combines code size and activity)
+
🏆 Score: 18.2 (combines code size and activity)
⚖️ License: Apache-2.0
🏷️ Latest Release: v4.3.3 (2024-08-23)
@@ -423,7 +423,7 @@
📈 Lines of Code: 4102
📄 Lines of Documentation: 357
📅 Development Period: 2024-05-04 to 2025-12-27
-
🏆 Score: 18.4 (combines code size and activity)
+
🏆 Score: 17.7 (combines code size and activity)
⚖️ License: Custom License
🏷️ Latest Release: v1.2.2 (2025-12-27)
@@ -450,7 +450,7 @@
📈 Lines of Code: 25762
📄 Lines of Documentation: 3101
📅 Development Period: 2008-05-15 to 2025-06-27
-
🏆 Score: 16.8 (combines code size and activity)
+
🏆 Score: 16.4 (combines code size and activity)
⚖️ License: Custom License
🧪 Status: Experimental (no releases yet)
@@ -475,7 +475,7 @@
📈 Lines of Code: 2288
📄 Lines of Documentation: 1180
📅 Development Period: 2021-05-21 to 2025-12-31
-
🏆 Score: 11.4 (combines code size and activity)
+
🏆 Score: 11.1 (combines code size and activity)
⚖️ License: GPL-3.0
🏷️ Latest Release: 3.0.0 (2024-10-01)
@@ -498,7 +498,7 @@
📈 Lines of Code: 396
📄 Lines of Documentation: 24
📅 Development Period: 2025-04-18 to 2025-05-11
-
🏆 Score: 10.5 (combines code size and activity)
+
🏆 Score: 10.2 (combines code size and activity)
⚖️ License: Custom License
🏷️ Latest Release: v1.0.0 (2025-05-11)
@@ -521,7 +521,7 @@
📈 Lines of Code: 1377
📄 Lines of Documentation: 113
📅 Development Period: 2024-12-05 to 2025-11-26
-
🏆 Score: 10.2 (combines code size and activity)
+
🏆 Score: 9.9 (combines code size and activity)
⚖️ License: Custom License
🧪 Status: Experimental (no releases yet)
@@ -538,15 +538,15 @@
19. gogios
-
💻 Languages: Go (96.7%), JSON (1.9%), YAML (1.4%)
+
💻 Languages: Go (98.0%), JSON (1.2%), YAML (0.9%)
📚 Documentation: Markdown (100.0%)
-
📊 Commits: 84
-
📈 Lines of Code: 1263
+
📊 Commits: 85
+
📈 Lines of Code: 2063
📄 Lines of Documentation: 211
-
📅 Development Period: 2023-04-17 to 2025-11-22
-
🏆 Score: 5.8 (combines code size and activity)
+
📅 Development Period: 2023-04-17 to 2026-01-06
+
🏆 Score: 6.3 (combines code size and activity)
⚖️ License: Custom License
-
🏷️ Latest Release: v1.2.1 (2025-10-27)
+
🏷️ Latest Release: v1.3.0 (2026-01-06)
@@ -569,7 +569,7 @@
📈 Lines of Code: 33
📄 Lines of Documentation: 3
📅 Development Period: 2025-04-03 to 2025-04-03
-
🏆 Score: 5.5 (combines code size and activity)
+
🏆 Score: 5.4 (combines code size and activity)
⚖️ License: No license found
🧪 Status: Experimental (no releases yet)
@@ -592,7 +592,7 @@
📈 Lines of Code: 2851
📄 Lines of Documentation: 52
📅 Development Period: 2023-08-27 to 2025-08-08
-
🏆 Score: 5.3 (combines code size and activity)
+
🏆 Score: 5.2 (combines code size and activity)
⚖️ License: MIT
🧪 Status: Experimental (no releases yet)
@@ -615,7 +615,7 @@
📈 Lines of Code: 1133
📄 Lines of Documentation: 78
📅 Development Period: 2024-01-20 to 2025-09-13
-
🏆 Score: 5.3 (combines code size and activity)
+
🏆 Score: 5.2 (combines code size and activity)
⚖️ License: MIT
🏷️ Latest Release: v0.0.4 (2025-09-13)
@@ -774,7 +774,31 @@
---
-
29. ioriot
+
29. photoalbum
+
+
+
💻 Languages: Shell (80.1%), Make (12.3%), Config (7.6%)
+
📚 Documentation: Markdown (100.0%)
+
📊 Commits: 153
+
📈 Lines of Code: 342
+
📄 Lines of Documentation: 39
+
📅 Development Period: 2011-11-19 to 2022-04-02
+
🏆 Score: 1.7 (combines code size and activity)
+
⚖️ License: No license found
+
🏷️ Latest Release: 0.5.0 (2022-02-21)
+
+⚠️ **Notice**: This project appears to be finished, obsolete, or no longer maintained. Last meaningful activity was over 2 years ago. Use at your own risk.
+
+**photoalbum** is a minimal Bash-based static site generator specifically designed for creating web photo albums on Unix-like systems. It transforms a directory of photos into a pure HTML+CSS website without any JavaScript, making it lightweight, fast, and accessible. The tool uses ImageMagick's convert utility for image processing and employs Bash-HTML template files that users can customize to match their preferences.
+
+The architecture is straightforward and Unix-philosophy driven: users configure a source directory containing photos via an photoalbumrc configuration file, run the generation command, and receive a fully static ./dist directory ready for deployment to any web server. This approach is useful for users who want a simple, dependency-light solution for sharing photo collections online without the overhead of dynamic web applications, databases, or JavaScript frameworks—just clean, static HTML that works everywhere.
+
+View on Codeberg
+View on GitHub
+
+---
+
+
30. ioriot
💻 Languages: C (55.5%), C/C++ (24.0%), Config (19.6%), Make (1.0%)
@@ -800,7 +824,7 @@
---
-
30. sway-autorotate
+
31. sway-autorotate
💻 Languages: Shell (100.0%)
@@ -823,7 +847,7 @@
---
-
31. mon
+
32. mon
💻 Languages: Perl (96.5%), Shell (1.8%), Make (1.2%), Config (0.4%)
@@ -847,7 +871,7 @@
---
-
32. staticfarm-apache-handlers
+
33. staticfarm-apache-handlers
💻 Languages: Perl (96.4%), Make (3.6%)
@@ -871,7 +895,7 @@
---
-
33. pingdomfetch
+
34. pingdomfetch
💻 Languages: Perl (97.3%), Make (2.7%)
@@ -895,14 +919,38 @@
---
-
34. xerl
+
35. ychat
+
+
+
💻 Languages: C++ (54.9%), C/C++ (23.0%), Shell (13.8%), Perl (2.5%), HTML (2.5%), Config (2.3%), Make (0.8%), CSS (0.2%)
+
📚 Documentation: Text (100.0%)
+
📊 Commits: 67
+
📈 Lines of Code: 67884
+
📄 Lines of Documentation: 127
+
📅 Development Period: 2008-05-15 to 2014-06-30
+
🏆 Score: 0.9 (combines code size and activity)
+
⚖️ License: GPL-2.0
+
🏷️ Latest Release: yhttpd-0.7.2 (2013-04-06)
+
+⚠️ **Notice**: This project appears to be finished, obsolete, or no longer maintained. Last meaningful activity was over 2 years ago. Use at your own risk.
+
+yChat is a high-performance, web-based chat server written in C++ that allows users to connect through standard web browsers without requiring special client software. It functions as a standalone HTTP server on a customizable port (default 2000), eliminating the need for Apache or other web servers, and uses only HTML, CSS, and JavaScript on the client side. The project was developed under the GNU GPL and designed for portability across POSIX-compliant systems including Linux, FreeBSD, and other UNIX variants.
+
+The architecture emphasizes speed and scalability through several key design choices: multi-threaded POSIX implementation with thread pooling to efficiently handle concurrent users, hash maps for O(1) data lookups, and a smart garbage collection system that caches inactive user and room objects for quick reuse. It features MySQL database support for registered users, a modular plugin system through dynamically loadable modules, HTML template-based customization, XML configuration, and an ncurses-based administration interface with CLI support. The codebase can also be converted to yhttpd, a standalone web server subset. Performance benchmarks show it handling over 1000 requests/second while using minimal CPU resources, with the system supporting comprehensive logging, multi-language support, and Apache-compatible log formats.
+
+View on Codeberg
+View on GitHub
+
+---
+
+
36. xerl
💻 Languages: Perl (98.3%), Config (1.2%), Make (0.5%)
📊 Commits: 670
📈 Lines of Code: 1675
📅 Development Period: 2011-03-06 to 2018-12-22
-
🏆 Score: 0.9 (combines code size and activity)
+
🏆 Score: 0.8 (combines code size and activity)
⚖️ License: Custom License
🏷️ Latest Release: v1.0.0 (2018-12-22)
@@ -917,7 +965,7 @@
---
-
35. perl-c-fibonacci
+
37. perl-c-fibonacci
💻 Languages: C (80.4%), Make (19.6%)
@@ -939,54 +987,6 @@
---
-
36. photoalbum
-
-
-
💻 Languages: Shell (78.1%), Make (13.5%), Config (8.4%)
-
📚 Documentation: Text (100.0%)
-
📊 Commits: 153
-
📈 Lines of Code: 311
-
📄 Lines of Documentation: 45
-
📅 Development Period: 2011-11-19 to 2022-02-20
-
🏆 Score: 0.8 (combines code size and activity)
-
⚖️ License: No license found
-
🏷️ Latest Release: 0.5.0 (2022-02-21)
-
-⚠️ **Notice**: This project appears to be finished, obsolete, or no longer maintained. Last meaningful activity was over 2 years ago. Use at your own risk.
-
-**photoalbum** is a minimal Bash-based static site generator specifically designed for creating web photo albums on Unix-like systems. It transforms a directory of photos into a pure HTML+CSS website without any JavaScript, making it lightweight, fast, and accessible. The tool uses ImageMagick's convert utility for image processing and employs Bash-HTML template files that users can customize to match their preferences.
-
-The architecture is straightforward and Unix-philosophy driven: users configure a source directory containing photos via an photoalbumrc configuration file, run the generation command, and receive a fully static ./dist directory ready for deployment to any web server. This approach is useful for users who want a simple, dependency-light solution for sharing photo collections online without the overhead of dynamic web applications, databases, or JavaScript frameworks—just clean, static HTML that works everywhere.
-
-View on Codeberg
-View on GitHub
-
----
-
-
37. ychat
-
-
-
💻 Languages: C++ (62.8%), C/C++ (27.1%), HTML (3.1%), Config (2.5%), Perl (1.9%), Shell (1.9%), Make (0.4%), CSS (0.2%)
-
📚 Documentation: Text (100.0%)
-
📊 Commits: 67
-
📈 Lines of Code: 27104
-
📄 Lines of Documentation: 109
-
📅 Development Period: 2008-05-15 to 2014-07-01
-
🏆 Score: 0.8 (combines code size and activity)
-
⚖️ License: GPL-2.0
-
🏷️ Latest Release: yhttpd-0.7.2 (2013-04-06)
-
-⚠️ **Notice**: This project appears to be finished, obsolete, or no longer maintained. Last meaningful activity was over 2 years ago. Use at your own risk.
-
-yChat is a high-performance, web-based chat server written in C++ that allows users to connect through standard web browsers without requiring special client software. It functions as a standalone HTTP server on a customizable port (default 2000), eliminating the need for Apache or other web servers, and uses only HTML, CSS, and JavaScript on the client side. The project was developed under the GNU GPL and designed for portability across POSIX-compliant systems including Linux, FreeBSD, and other UNIX variants.
-
-The architecture emphasizes speed and scalability through several key design choices: multi-threaded POSIX implementation with thread pooling to efficiently handle concurrent users, hash maps for O(1) data lookups, and a smart garbage collection system that caches inactive user and room objects for quick reuse. It features MySQL database support for registered users, a modular plugin system through dynamically loadable modules, HTML template-based customization, XML configuration, and an ncurses-based administration interface with CLI support. The codebase can also be converted to yhttpd, a standalone web server subset. Performance benchmarks show it handling over 1000 requests/second while using minimal CPU resources, with the system supporting comprehensive logging, multi-language support, and Apache-compatible log formats.
-
-View on Codeberg
-View on GitHub
-
----
-
38. fapi
@@ -1085,27 +1085,29 @@
---
-
42. fype
+
42. vs-sim
-
💻 Languages: C (72.1%), C/C++ (20.7%), HTML (5.7%), Make (1.5%)
-
📚 Documentation: Text (71.3%), LaTeX (28.7%)
-
📊 Commits: 99
-
📈 Lines of Code: 10196
-
📄 Lines of Documentation: 1741
-
📅 Development Period: 2008-05-15 to 2021-11-03
+
💻 Languages: Java (98.8%), Shell (0.7%), XML (0.4%)
+
📚 Documentation: LaTeX (98.4%), Text (1.4%), Markdown (0.2%)
+
📊 Commits: 411
+
📈 Lines of Code: 16303
+
📄 Lines of Documentation: 2903
+
📅 Development Period: 2008-05-15 to 2021-05-01
🏆 Score: 0.7 (combines code size and activity)
⚖️ License: Custom License
-
🧪 Status: Experimental (no releases yet)
+
🏷️ Latest Release: v1.0 (2008-08-24)
⚠️ **Notice**: This project appears to be finished, obsolete, or no longer maintained. Last meaningful activity was over 2 years ago. Use at your own risk.
-Fype is a 32-bit scripting language designed as a fun, AWK-inspired alternative with a simpler syntax. It supports variables with automatic type conversion, functions, loops, control structures, and built-in operations for math, I/O, and system calls. A notable feature is its support for "synonyms" (references/aliases to variables and functions), along with both procedures (using the caller's namespace) and functions (with lexical scoping). The language uses a straightforward syntax with single-character comments (#) and statement-based execution terminated by semicolons.
+
-The implementation uses a simple top-down parser with maximum lookahead of 1, interpreting code simultaneously as it parses, which means syntax errors are only caught at runtime. Written in C and compiled with GCC, it's designed for BSD systems (tested on FreeBSD 7.0) and uses NetBSD Make for building. The project is still unreleased and incomplete, but aims to eventually match AWK's capabilities while potentially adding modern features like function pointers and closures, though explicitly avoiding complexity like OOP, Unicode, or threading.
+VS-Sim is a Java-based open source simulator for distributed systems, designed to help students and researchers visualize and understand distributed computing concepts. Based on the roadmap, it appears to support simulating various distributed systems protocols including Lamport and vector clocks for logical time management, and potentially distributed file systems like NFS and AFS. The simulator features event-based simulation, logging capabilities, and a plugin architecture.
-View on Codeberg
-View on GitHub
+The project appears to be currently inactive, with the repository containing minimal source code at present. It was originally developed as part of academic work (referenced as "diplomarbeit.pdf" in the roadmap), likely for teaching distributed systems concepts through interactive simulation and protocol visualization.
+
+View on Codeberg
+View on GitHub
---
@@ -1133,7 +1135,31 @@
---
-
44. pwgrep
+
44. fype
+
+
+
💻 Languages: C (71.3%), C/C++ (20.6%), HTML (6.6%), Make (1.5%)
+
📚 Documentation: Text (60.2%), LaTeX (39.8%)
+
📊 Commits: 99
+
📈 Lines of Code: 8906
+
📄 Lines of Documentation: 1431
+
📅 Development Period: 2008-05-15 to 2021-04-29
+
🏆 Score: 0.7 (combines code size and activity)
+
⚖️ License: Custom License
+
🧪 Status: Experimental (no releases yet)
+
+⚠️ **Notice**: This project appears to be finished, obsolete, or no longer maintained. Last meaningful activity was over 2 years ago. Use at your own risk.
+
+Fype is a 32-bit scripting language designed as a fun, AWK-inspired alternative with a simpler syntax. It supports variables with automatic type conversion, functions, loops, control structures, and built-in operations for math, I/O, and system calls. A notable feature is its support for "synonyms" (references/aliases to variables and functions), along with both procedures (using the caller's namespace) and functions (with lexical scoping). The language uses a straightforward syntax with single-character comments (#) and statement-based execution terminated by semicolons.
+
+The implementation uses a simple top-down parser with maximum lookahead of 1, interpreting code simultaneously as it parses, which means syntax errors are only caught at runtime. Written in C and compiled with GCC, it's designed for BSD systems (tested on FreeBSD 7.0) and uses NetBSD Make for building. The project is still unreleased and incomplete, but aims to eventually match AWK's capabilities while potentially adding modern features like function pointers and closures, though explicitly avoiding complexity like OOP, Unicode, or threading.
+
+View on Codeberg
+View on GitHub
+
+---
+
+
-⚠️ **Notice**: This project appears to be finished, obsolete, or no longer maintained. Last meaningful activity was over 2 years ago. Use at your own risk.
-
-VS-Sim is a Java-based open source simulator for distributed systems, designed to help students and researchers visualize and understand distributed computing concepts. Based on the roadmap, it appears to support simulating various distributed systems protocols including Lamport and vector clocks for logical time management, and potentially distributed file systems like NFS and AFS. The simulator features event-based simulation, logging capabilities, and a plugin architecture.
-
-The project appears to be currently inactive, with the repository containing minimal source code at present. It was originally developed as part of academic work (referenced as "diplomarbeit.pdf" in the roadmap), likely for teaching distributed systems concepts through interactive simulation and protocol visualization.
-
-View on Codeberg
-View on GitHub