🔗 Link Stash | 17th March 2026
2026-03-17 05:54
Fresh dump of interesting and/or useful web links I've found recently. Full link stash here.
This week: I accidently closed a bunch of tabs I was saving for bookmarking by crashing my browser. I could have recovered them, but chose not too. The blank slate is nice. I went one step further and removed the tab bar completely in Librewolf, after reading Ben's Building a LibreWolf Browser Setup with reasonable privacy and Vim Keybindings article. Now I rarely have more than one tab open, have more reading space, and less distractions. My interneting is changing. Maybe one day those lost tabs will appear in my eye-space again, maybe not. These ones made it in before and after the event.
Really like how this article describes guerrilla gardening, a "deceptively gentle strain of activism". A fight against "aesthetically bland and politically toxic" environments. I think I have a calling.
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329. The Resistance Hub
A well curated and tidy resource hub on resistance. It's not based on fear, but on preparedness. Plenty of free PDF downloads, and recommended reading. The resilience toolkit page sent me down a rabbithole - I like how the domains are structed - physical, mental, social, economic and planning resilience. The resistance toolkit focuses on non-violent actions, from digital security to street-level tactics. Some great principles to live by, embed in organisations or apply as an individual.
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ReadBeanIceCream shares his barebones kanban setup for tracking his reading. Simply utilising folder structure and naming conventions (and grep, tree, and a small script) he's come up with a pretty smooth method that does what it needs to do. If I kickstart my reading habit again I might give something like this a go.
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Lots of tips for maintaining privacy online. Inspired by MITRE ATT&CK. Well organised with search. Not very in-depth, but some links are shared, and I can easily follow up with wider web searches.
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Julia shares some of her use-cases for Wireshark.
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325. Wireshark
A powerful FOSS network analysis GUI tool that I would like to learn to help me grasp a few more networking concepts. The user guide is extensive.
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Complete rundown of why the best date format to use is the best date format to use. Spoiler - 2026-02-26 and the corresponding human readable 2nd February 2026 wins. I'll be flicking this to anyone who thinks otherwise (work colleague insists on DDMMYY. YUCK!)
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323. mixflow
Another chill radio station, via Rodrigo
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There are a lot of linux distros out there. This is a refreshing post from someone knowledgeable to keep me falling for the hype. A few personal thought nuggets on differences in distros helps me understand the ecosystem a bit better. I've been happy with Debian for my short time in Linux, but funnily enough the only one I MAY try next is openSUSE, which the author uses (or used at time of writing at least). But still, I'm probably not going to change any time soon unless its to refresh myself on installing an OS, and giving my laptop a spring clean.
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What the title says, but so much more. Lots of sub-topics of computers and internet like permacomputing, networking, and online communities. A heap of resources and links to the wider web.
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Full link stash here.