Home
Blog
Archive
Cool Links
Quick Reviews
Photography
About
Digital Garden
Projects
Newsletter

Cool Links

Cool links are a collection of interesting things I find around the web. They can range from fun dumb websites to deep thought-provoking essays, or more commonly something in between. The feed here updates frequently, and I compile everything into a blog post on the last day of each month.

Illustration of Cool Links in a laptop screen, with a hand pointing at them in a cool way.

Filter by tag

#dev
73
#fun
41
#tech
28
#deep-read
22
#ai
16
#design
8
#app
8
#games
4
#misc
2
#mental-health
2

Filter by month

2026
July
4
June
6
May
9
April
8
March
3
February
7
January
6
2025
December
7
November
10
October
9
September
8
August
7
July
6
June
4
May
11
April
7
March
7
February
14
January
4
2024
December
4
November
11
October
7
September
7
August
6
July
5

Filter by tag

#dev
73
#fun
41
#tech
28
#deep-read
22
#ai
16
#design
8
#app
8
#games
4
#misc
2
#mental-health
2

Filter by month

2026
July
4
June
6
May
9
April
8
March
3
February
7
January
6
2025
December
7
November
10
October
9
September
8
August
7
July
6
June
4
May
11
April
7
March
7
February
14
January
4
2024
December
4
November
11
October
7
September
7
August
6
July
5

7 links from October 2024

HTML for People , by Blake Watson

Cool Link
2024-10-31
#dev

Building on the previous paradox: did you know that HTML was originally meant to be understandable and writable by anyone?

Before us web devs came along and scared people off, HTML was actually seen as a very simple way of structuring and linking data.

And it still is! This course aims to teach HTML to people with no technical knowledge, so they’re able to build their own simple web pages (or just mess around with existing ones, which is really fun).

Open

Nothing Left to Solve , by Louie Mantia

Cool Link
2024-10-31
#tech

I don’t know if you’ve heard, but The Browser Company, the company behind the Arc Browser (which I’ve been using for a couple years as my main browser) has announced that they’ve pretty much given up on monetizing it and will just keep it working as-is in the future, with no new development.

This article reflects a bit on how it seems that tech companies seem to be running out of problems to solve, which results in great products that can’t find their footing (outside of small niches) due to not really changing much about their user’s lives.

Open

nvm Desktop

Cool Link
2024-10-31
#dev

nvm (Node Version Manager) is one of the best tools in my web dev toolkit. It allows you to keep multiple versions of NodeJS installed, which is usually a must if you swap between different projects all day. I’d even say it’s worth it even if you only have one version, since installing NodeJS via nvm is way easier than the official way.

This is a way of using nvm with a graphical interface, in case you’re not too fond of CLIs (or simply prefer a simple GUI instead).

Open

State of CSS 2024

Cool Link
2024-10-31
#dev

These “State of” results are always fun, if only for the graphics alone. This one has pretty good data though, as 2024 was one of CSS’s best years, with Container Queries, :has() (which allows for Quantity Queries), native nesting, native page transitions, and more.

Open

Svelte 5 is alive

Cool Link
2024-10-31
#dev

I’ve been growing increasingly unhappy with JavaScript frameworks as of late, but I still have a soft spot for Svelte. Svelte is what my blog is built with, and it’s always been a pleasure to use. Version 5 significantly changes some of its core features, apparently for the better. I’m excited to upgrade eventually (and really glad that they kept backwards compatibility).

Open

The Static Site Paradox

Cool Link
2024-10-31
#dev

The web is, at its core, just links to HTML files with some CSS and JS on top. That’s how it was years ago and how it technically still is.

Over the years, things became more complex and many layers of abstraction were introduced. A lot of web developers have never had any real contact with the core of the web.

So we ended up on a place where it’s much easier to find and use an overly-complex, bloated solution for websites than just having the bare minimum (that usually works better).

Isn’t that wild? In the author’s words:

“the web doesn’t belong just to software engineers. The more we make the web complex, the more we push normal users into the enclosures that we like to call social networks.”

I’ve been a web developer for over 10 years now and I can afford the luxury of building my own website - a static, simple, lean one. People with less or no coding knowledge can’t have that. They need to use tooling that ships so much code and complexity if they want to have their own. Or, even worse - they’ll stick to social media platforms instead. 😱

Open

You should be using an RSS reader , by Cory Doctorow

Cool Link
2024-10-31
#tech

There’s really nothing else I can add to this argument that Cory hasn’t already said. But really, RSS is the best way to follow a publication or a person there can be. It’s the best way for you to actually have control of what you read and decide when to do so.

Open
© 2026 Matheus Fantinel
Mastodon
GitHub
LinkedIn
Email
RSS
Made in Brazil
Made in Serra Gaúcha
Now in Italy
Powered by Autism
Trans Rights are Human Rights