84 posts tagged with web.
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British Placename Mapper

A web app that lets you search for British place names that match certain queries (eg. starts with 'great', ends with 'burgh', contains 'sea') and show them on an interactive map. Fascinating patterns start to emerge, and you can even share links to your favourite configurations.
posted by robintw on Apr 3, 2024 - 8 comments

Where in the World

'Where in the World' is an interactive web based game in which you try to locate notable places or historical events on a map. You are given a series of 10 locations to find on a map. You try to get the lowest distance between your guess and the actual location. [more inside]
posted by bitbotbit on Mar 24, 2024 - 5 comments

Incredible Doom: Eternal September

A new comic series we're launching today in the Incredible Doom universe (that Metafilter has been so kind to!), Eternal September is an intimate, harrowing series about teenagers navigating the wild, dangerous days of the early web. You can read Issue 1 free online today, and you'll be able to read the entire series for free as it's posted to followers. No ads, no trackers, no middlemen, we're going back to our roots on the open web. [more inside]
posted by churl on Sep 26, 2023 - 2 comments

Dither All the Things - Atkinson Dithering for the Web

I think we can all agree that web pages today are too colorful, which is why I have created a web component that crushes your images down to crisp, pixel-perfect dithered black and white. This blog post features an interactive demo - dither your own images and party like it is 1985!
posted by AndrewStephens on Jan 19, 2023 - 14 comments

Woefully Neglected

Sorry for the lack of updates! Yesterday was 10 years to the day since the last update to this site. [more inside]
posted by Devils Rancher on Jun 11, 2022 - 5 comments

DNDle - Wordle, but you're picking stats to guess D&D monsters

It feels like there's a Wordle clone for everybody nowadays. But I decided to go in a slightly different direction when I made DNDle, a game in which you try to guess the Dungeons & Dragons "monster of the day" by assigning values to its attributes and being told where you've got them right. [more inside]
posted by avapoet on Feb 16, 2022 - 2 comments

A channel vocoder walkthrough

It's an interactive explanation of a channel vocoder. (Homer Dudley's original vocoder from the 1930s was channel vocoder.) It let you perform all of the steps that the vocoder goes through to analyze a music signal and a voice signal and synthesize them together.
posted by ignignokt on Sep 6, 2021 - 0 comments

The Sound of the Far Future

This is an ambient concept album that tells you about events that will happen in the far future. You can listen to the recording, or you can have your browser play it "live" with accompanying visualization. [more inside]
posted by ignignokt on Jul 23, 2021 - 1 comment

"Axe Feather 2021" - recreating a 16-year-old ad [probably SFW, depending on your work]

In 2004, Axe/Lynx (the deodorant brand) released an interactive advertisement that used then-new video features of the Flash platform. This was a year before YouTube, and the Internet went crazy about their new found ability to virtually tickle a woman lying on a bed. It fell off the Internet in 2009 and with the death of Flash you can't even (easily) see it on archive.org any more... so I recreated it for the modern web. [more inside]
posted by avapoet on Feb 2, 2021 - 1 comment

Blinking marquees of the early Web

In the mid-to-late 1990s, two browser giants - Netscape's Navigator and Microsoft's Internet Explorer - began the First Browser Wars, each introducing their own proprietary features to the nascent web. The former gave us <blink>, the latter <marquee>, and many personal websites used both (one wrapped inside the other) in order to provide animation to virtually all of their users. Don't bother dusting off your old computer: I've recorded what it looked like! [more inside]
posted by avapoet on Nov 11, 2020 - 4 comments

Codepip: coding games for learning web dev

A few years back, I released two CSS coding games as weekend open source projects: Flexbox Froggy and Grid Garden. Based on the positive reception they got, I was motivated to launch Codepip and expand into more games. Since launch I've added six games for learning different aspects of HTML, CSS, and JavaScript, with more in the works. Last week came Sourcery, which introduces the HTML workflow tool Emmet.
posted by thomaspark on Oct 31, 2020 - 2 comments

Random Animal Crossing Island Dream Codes

The latest release of Animal Crossing New Horizons let’s users upload their islands so others can visit at anytime, you just need their dream address. I made a tool that aggregates Dream addresses from public social media posts so users can easily get a random dream island to visit.
posted by disaster77 on Aug 13, 2020 - 0 comments

No Scary Parts: a browser extension that skips scary scenes on Disney+

No Scary Parts is a chrome extension that skips creepy scenes in classic Disney movies on Disney+. Since the beginning, every Disney film, without fail, has included a weird scene or two that traumatizes generations of kids, from Dumbo's pink elephants to Fantasia's Night on Bald Mountain. Currently I have 5 movies supported. If you have a sensitive toddler or don't want flashbacks to your own childhood, try out this extension.
posted by thomaspark on Jul 9, 2020 - 3 comments

singingbush.online

Do you love The Singing Bush from the 1986 comedy Β‘Three Amigos!? [more inside]
posted by overeducated_alligator on Jun 30, 2020 - 7 comments

example.com

[text deleted] [more inside]
posted by MetaFilter World Peace on Jun 30, 2020 - 0 comments

The Mad Magazine Fold-In Effect in CSS

At age 99, comic artist Al Jaffee just announced his retirement. Jaffee was best known for his Mad Magazine fold-ins, where folding the page reveals a hidden message in the artwork. Plenty of examples can be found on the web. Unfortunately, they all show the before and after statically, diminishing the magic. There’s a whole generation who may have only seen the fold-ins in this format. So of course I had to create the paper folding effect for the web.
posted by thomaspark on Jun 9, 2020 - 5 comments

Unicode Text Transformer

This little web toy converts latin text into unicode variants. It translates spaces and some punctuation into full-width variants when the glyphs in the variant are generally square-ish, otherwise it leaves them alone. π”œπ”¬π”² π” π”žπ”« 𝔲𝔰𝔒 𝔦𝔱 𝔱𝔬 π”ͺπ”žπ”¨π”’ 𝔱𝔒𝔡𝔱 𝔩𝔦𝔨𝔒 𝔱π”₯𝔦𝔰. 𝓐𝓷𝓭 𝓽𝓱𝓲𝓼.
posted by Sokka shot first on Jan 31, 2020 - 10 comments

Incredible Doom: Season One

A gut-wrenching coming of age story of unlikely alliances, magic, daring escapes, young love, and crime sprees, all squeezed over 2400 baud modems. We're so proud to be finally releasing the entire 6-issue print and web comic Incredible Doom free for everyone to read online, no strings attached. We also made a new little video to give you an idea of what it's like. [more inside]
posted by churl on Sep 17, 2019 - 6 comments

Tufte Bootstrap

Edward Tufte uses distinctive, simple, well-set typography, extensive sidenotes, and tight integration of graphics and charts. This project is an attempt to bring that style to the Bootstrap framework. Contributors to this open source project are welcome. [more inside]
posted by dylan_k on May 22, 2019 - 3 comments

Web archiving for bots

From the explanatory post: I’ve made several bots over the years. They’re mostly Twitter bots. Some of them are throwaway larks, and some of them only work in the moment. If Twitter becomes too harmful to humanity to gift with free content, I’m OK with letting those go. However, there are many bots whose fate I want to keep in my own hands, rather than Twitter’s. To that end, I built a static site updater. [more inside]
posted by ignignokt on Jan 31, 2018 - 4 comments

Chart.Business

High-performance web site for business professionals with advanced business needs, keep up-to-date on all business facts for your business. Growth, leverage, portfolio, value-added, markets and other key business metrics. [more inside]
posted by overeducated_alligator on Jan 11, 2018 - 5 comments

OUR AUDIENCE INCLUDES

SAD CATS β€’ PURCHASERS OF SPACECRAFT β€’ MACHINE INTELLIGENCES WHOSE ID SUGGESTS THEY MAY BE USERS OF ICHOR (I made a web toy that generates short descriptions of very specific demographic groups, and saves the ones people click on.) [more inside]
posted by Sokka shot first on Jan 2, 2018 - 1 comment

Convert Word Docs to Mind Maps

The project takes your microsoft word documents and converts them into mind maps. [more inside]
posted by The Ted on Sep 3, 2017 - 0 comments

High Post Software

In early 2017 I launched a new web and mobile development consultancy, focused on small and medium sized organizations, especially those with a social mission. [more inside]
posted by Kwine on May 22, 2017 - 0 comments

Stairs, forever

Stairs that keep going down that you can follow forever (or perhaps more realistically, until your browser crashes), if you want. [more inside]
posted by ignignokt on Feb 9, 2017 - 0 comments

xn--qeiaa.ws: Emoji Domain Registration

Domains can be more than just letters and numbers. Most people have no idea they can just type a bunch of hearts in their address bar and go to a domain... and yet, it works!
posted by ph00dz on Dec 8, 2016 - 2 comments

Dingwings: Reverse Wingdings

Dingwings is a font you can only type with an emoji keyboard. [more inside]
posted by overeducated_alligator on Dec 6, 2016 - 1 comment

Benbot

I built a personal Siri, accessible over the web. It's a work in progress, but I thought I'd share what I've made so far, and how I built it.
posted by bwerdmuller on Jun 25, 2016 - 2 comments

Malimbe: an asynchronous server-side web framework in Swift

After Apple open-sourced their Swift programming language and released a preliminary Linux port, I started putting together a server-side web framework for it. So did many others, though my web framework is (as far as I know) the only one to use futures for concurrency. It's still very much a work in progress, though now has a few toy apps, some useful middleware, and a Swiftily protocol-based HTML generation mechanism. [more inside]
posted by acb on Feb 12, 2016 - 0 comments

Monthly Damage

Are you trying to buy a house? Well, if so, this tells you how much you'll have to pay each month for it, factoring in taxes and loan terms, so you can immediately find out if a house or condo is just too bonkers for you.
posted by ignignokt on Oct 30, 2015 - 5 comments

Diogenes

I quit facebook a long time ago and decided to systematically contact my friends instead. You too can do this. [more inside]
posted by curuinor on Sep 30, 2015 - 3 comments

The New Code

Seven years ago I asked about blogging solutions on AskMe. A year after that, I had the site up and running. But times (and best practices) change, so I've completely rewritten, redesigned, rebranded and relaunched my web development site. [more inside]
posted by Bora Horza Gobuchul on Aug 30, 2015 - 1 comment

Box Vs. Can

Since the beginning of time man has wondered, "What receptacle is superior, the box or the can?" This web series aims to answer that question. [more inside]
posted by skeleton69 on Jul 21, 2015 - 0 comments

106.js

Play an 80s synth in your browser with 106.js, a MIDI-enabled emulation of the Roland Juno-106 synthesizer. Chrome/Desktop only. Github repo here.
posted by ludwig_van on May 18, 2015 - 9 comments

Glowy Clock

We used to have an LCD clock radio that glowed various rainbow colors. I "voted it off the island," so to speak, because it seemed like clock radio was a waste of space in the age of clocks-on-everything, but we missed spacing out while looking at it, so I put together this web substitute. [more inside]
posted by ignignokt on Feb 15, 2015 - 14 comments

Post-apocalyptic web series

Swords, martial arts, action, adventure, drama!! [more inside]
posted by ObscureReferenceMan on Feb 2, 2015 - 1 comment

Batch uploads to AWS S3 using Clojure

Clojure demonstration of authenticating and batch uploading to Amazon Web Services' Simple Storage Service. [more inside]
posted by daveliepmann on Sep 3, 2014 - 0 comments

Let's build a browser engine!

I work for Mozilla as a web browser developer. I've found that it's hard to learn the inner workings of a browser, so I started building a β€œtoy” HTML/CSS rendering engine designed to be easy to understand and modify. This is the first in a series of articles that will explain the code I wrote, and also walk you through the process of writing your own toy rendering engine from scratch.
posted by mbrubeck on Aug 8, 2014 - 3 comments

Pee & Pray

Pee & Pray is an ongoing web comic starring Peeing Calvin and Praying Calvin. I'm 18 episodes in so far. There is some NSFW language. And peeing. Thank you.
posted by Ratio on Jul 8, 2014 - 15 comments

Whispering Machine

is one of three strange glimpses into Us Conductors, a theremin novel by me. Each of the trio of sites visits a different passage from the book through the lens of a different designer, with different contributing musical artists: Whispering Machine, by Luc Mikelsons & Adam Benzen, has sounds by Bear In Heaven; Our shadows slanting by the lamps..., by Brendan Reed, has sounds by Owen Pallett; I gazed at a long shelf of batteries..., by Jez Burrows, has sounds by an unnamed musician.
posted by Marquis on Jun 21, 2014 - 1 comment

Internet Directory

According to ICANN, .COM domains were intended for business, .ORG for nonprofit, and .NET for internet providers and "Web Portals." Internet Directory is a listing of every domain using these TLDs -- beginning with the 115 million .COMs -- as they stand in early 2014. On a fast browser, it takes 599 days to watch every domain scroll by. [more inside]
posted by rottytooth on May 20, 2014 - 7 comments

Just Graph It

A simple app for creating a line graph. It works by entering a number, a date-time is automatically associated with that number when it is entered. Two or more numbers and you got yourself a line graph. Not much more to it, there's the ability to create multiple graphs, and to edit entries, but tt's light weight by design. Note: Requires a modern browser with HTML5. It worked for me on PC (Chrome), Android and iPhone, it should work on everything else. There's a shorter alternate url as well: g.joha.us [more inside]
posted by forforf on Mar 12, 2014 - 0 comments

Extrasolar

A few years ago, I helped build a prototype of an original idea for a web game, and today it's out of beta and open to all! "What is it?" you ask. It's one of the very few games in which you are yourself and not playing a character. It is an experience you can have over the course of a month or so, a few minutes at a time. It increases your understanding of exobiology. It's exploring a new planet, one picture at a time. [more inside]
posted by breath on Feb 19, 2014 - 10 comments

Binge Browser

An in-browser toolbar that helps you browse the archives of your favorite website. Includes hotkeys, a random page key, a title bar to quickly cycle through random titles, and more. Try it with Metafilter, Ask Mefi, or Mefi Projects. You can also browse a number of comics, some popular Tumblrs, several interesting wikipedia collections, and more. Additional websites (including The Onion) are listed on the main page. Use the hotkeys for maximal enjoyment. [more inside]
posted by AfterAlbuquerque on Jan 30, 2014 - 3 comments

Writing Blocks

A text drafting tool so minimalist that the words you're writing are invisible [more inside]
posted by raisindebt on Nov 19, 2013 - 13 comments

Back Again?

I wrote a Chrome extension that tells you how many times you've visited the page you're on, right in the button by the URL. Clicking the button gives you a graph showing how many times you've visited the page in the last week. [more inside]
posted by ignignokt on Nov 18, 2013 - 7 comments

Shoot the Rancors!

Shoot the Rancors! is a retro arcade-style game implemented in pure CSS β€” no Flash or Javascript β€” as an exercise to see how far CSS can be stretched and abused. Players proceed through levels of shooting moving Rancors (from the Star Wars films), with all user interaction, transitions, animations, and level progressions implemented in HTML and CSS3. It should work cross-platform on modern desktop browsers.
posted by quarantine on Nov 15, 2013 - 0 comments

your next sentence

A web app to help blocked fiction writers write the next sentence (and the one after that, and the one after that...) [more inside]
posted by raisindebt on Oct 12, 2013 - 0 comments

Gametron 7000

Gametron 7000 (GT7K) is a web-based game-building toolkit, designed and built by myself for use in non-programming-centric game design classes I've been teaching in NYC. It's almost all visual (no coding) and allows non-tech-savvy game creators to make fairly simple 2D sprite-based games. Even though it's a little rough around the edges, hopefully it's fun to use! [more inside]
posted by chasing on Jul 3, 2013 - 1 comment

Stirling

Stirling is the first Microserial from the YouTube channel Before the Crow. The web series follows Matt Stirling, who after surviving an accident, worries he may be losing his grip on reality. [more inside]
posted by phillipmasters on May 2, 2013 - 0 comments

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