BakerNet

March 2026

Archive page for March 2026 by BakerNet
  • Posted on

    I stumbled across a blog article a while ago that I wanted to share with my work about Fuck Off Contact pages. While I liked the low-res look and feel of the post, I did not realize that the entire site is amazing.

    It's got that retro charm for people who grew up with ANSI terminals and low-res web experiences, (think 16 colour 640x480 pixels on a CRT). I saved up for a card that was capable of 256 colours to get a better web experience. ANYWAY, the site loads fast, looks great and really shows what you can do with a little know how. I'd love to emulate that for my personal site. I'm still learning though and have a focus/time issue that I'm still working through.

    This is the web I want to get back to and I'm not the only one. I'll have some other links to share about that soon, I want to finish reading them myself first.

  • Posted on

    I saw this image before. The one associated with this post. My inner-child squealed, I was nostalgic for the tech of the time. I wanted to run a BBS back in the 90's, I could only dream to have one with this many nodes. Another thought that I had was about a modern version might be 4-5 lines each per single pentium-powered node with a POSIX multitasking OS or a modern eWaste PC running a Telnet powered BBS. With Discord doing it's fuckery, I have the thought I'd archive and discontinue "my" server and put up a IRC server. I wonder how hard it would be to convert my groups to follow suit. Somethign to consider.

  • Posted on

    I really want to stop talking about AI. I really want the bubble to pop.

    Here is an article about how students are effectively being trained to write worse to not get flagged as AI generated. This is beyond ridiculous.

    On sify.com we have article about humans needing to clean up AI slop. How quaint. If we need to clean up the slop, how is this worth it, especially since our next generation of humans is writing worse?

    Thankfully Kagi is here to help us (for the time being) determine what is generated by AI and what isnt. The site seems to be geared towards kids, though I have the thought that everyone could benefit from it.

  • Posted on

    There's a Youtube video that discusses the purpose of this website here. Well, not really as I started this last year and only watched the video today. Actually,

    Here's the embed:

    Turns out there's a geocities clone called neocities. This is great, fantastic even. I would rather go here than Reddit, (though I really digg that digg.com is back! Seriously, check this shit out. Make a website, get off the platforms! Reach out to me and I'll help you get set up. I love this kind of technology and this is what started my love of networking. All the cool things.

    Once again, I regret not saving previous versions of my websites. I would love to have that little time capsule. I didn't see my GeoCities account on archive.org and I'm not entirely sure of the address anyway.

    This video also informed me of a neat project, a web server powered by solar energy that seems right up my alley. It's tech, sustainable, and DIY all in one site.

  • Posted on

    This is a cool website. Do you recall seeing the 1995 classic movie Hackers? This website mimics the UI that our hackers used to hack the Gibson.

    All kinds of awesome.

  • Posted on

    The wonders of new (and old) technology never cease to amaze. This article from SciTechDaily posits that your own body could be used to see you based on capturing and analyzing WiFi radio signals. The tech has an incredible success rate and seems like no special firmware needs to be deployed. Who needs Ring Cameras when you have WiFi just about everywhere.

    I wonder, could LTE cellular signals be used for the same purpose? What about FM Radio, or some other radio waves? I expect that LTE/5G may be the closest in density that could be used for this.

  • Posted on

    I found this via HackerNews or Kottke. At least I thought that I did. I can't find the source. Regardless in the last few days I saw this and bookmerked it. It hasn't changed. This is the first page on the Internet. Ever. It's being served via HTTPS, which I expect was a change. However, this was not the way HTML was originally displayed in 1989. This is a closer experience.

    Absolutely brilliant. Reminds me of Telnet sites. I miss the old ways sometimes. It could be that I'm level 50 now, and this might be the age where I reminiss about the good old days with really rosy glasses. I am also reminded of BBS' and the cool ANSI/ASCII art scene that propagated through them.

  • Posted on

    I like art. I do not consider myself an artist. I have pencil drawings and small pieces of art hangin in my walls from friends (and my kids) who are artists. They create art. I know what I like and I really like art that has a retro look and feel ot it. Yesterday when I was reading my RSS Feed, I came across this post. I'm not sure of I came to it via HackerNews or Kotke.

    Regardless, I really like the artwork here. The artwork for the people specifically hard form the late 80's and early 90's, though my tastes tend to go father back. I had a "vintage" mac and I played briefly with hypercard. If my childhood home had a Mac instead of an IBM clone, I would have been completely enthralled with hypercard. From what I gather, it was a pretty robust system.