This sort of thing was once called a "blogroll". Nowadays, it's more of a laundry-list of the sites, blogs, feeds, companies and other stuff that I've found to be worth recommending, avoiding or approaching with caution.
A fascinating look back on day-to-day life in the 1600s. It's the blog I'm most excited to read in my RSS Reader ready, and it even inspired by John Evelyn project.
I love the simple design and technical content to Floris's blog. Especially the post and approach to Borg backup.
Blogs feed linked
Internet Tools
Google Search
caution
Once the only valuable option, now its non-user aligned business model has slowly eroded its quality to an awful discovery engine peppered with misdirection and data abuse. It's free because you pay some other way.
The suite of Proton tools are great, especially Mail. Secure and private. OSS (sort of) and usually a good UX also. The only caveat is that some features are lacking, and I would not recommend having all your important services under one account or provider, especially secret/password management.
An open-source, but paid, RSS reader service that works on all OS's. It's relatively private and secure IMO based on the source and it's in-house hosting.
Secret password management. It does one thing and does it well. It's secure and private in my review of the white-papers and an excellent product. The extra software development features like SSH key agent etc are great also.
A corporate product seemingly only designed for business contacts and not people. Poor security practices, and a terrible user experience. Nothing you'd want in a password manager.
Tobias writes extremely well and has a solid and engaging grasp on modern living though Greco-Roman Stoic philosophy, among others. See his writing about ataraxia.
I've used VS Code for two years and Vim for five years. But, I simply keep coming back to ST4. It cannot be beaten for a beautiful environment for software development.
A super nice writing and PKB/personal wiki app. Available on all OS's. It can be a super clean and minimal or super-maximal - you decide.
Software feed linked
Apple
caution
Apple used to be the good alternative, but in recent times they're more commercially focused than user focused. The software and hardware quality has significantly degraded, and you don't have sovereignty over your own device. FYI They remotely locked an iPad of mine and made it e-waste without recourse.
My daily driver for 15+ years (excl. a few distro hops). It's rock solid and power-user focused Linux and Desktop Environment. It may have been branded a "noob distro" by the community but in my experience you can't beat it for stability and functionality as a technical person. Although, I am keeping an eye on >= Debian Bookwork and Vanilla OS 2 too.
A clean GitHub clone, and much more light weight than GitLab. It has everything you need for a WUI-based git workflow and even GitHub compatible action runners too. Free, self-hosted or hosted and open source.
Tech Infrastructure linked
GitHub
caution
GitHub has been instrumental for open source development over the last decade. However, since Microsoft bought them the technical quality has slightly declined (still no IPv6!) and has fuelled MS unethical (perhaps illegal) abuse of content for AI training. Honourable mention for SourceHut should anyone prefer a more traditional approach to software work.
A commercial dystopia. Avoid at all costs for domains, hosting, or anything really. Their services are poor quality, coupled with extreme predatory sales practices and poor support.
An independent UK business with longevity. They're an old school hosting provider for domains, websites, servers, and email. Excellent service and support. Old-fashioned UI.
Tech Infrastructure feed linked
Workplace
Zendesk Sell
avoid
A.K.A. Future Simple, Base CRM. Originally an acceptable experience due to the lack of simple competition. It has since absolutely tanked in quality since it's acquisition by Zendesk.
Workplace
Google Workspace
caution
An extremely convenient workspace for email, documents, and their creation, storage, and sharing with others. However, their products are designed to serve their business model of collecting and abusing data for advertising. They're clearly not built for the users needs.
Workplace
Zendesk
caution
It's a bloated user support ecosystem empowered by its lack of viable competition. It champions poor user experience and only a party acceptable experience for its customers. Money is better spent elsewhere IMO.
Workplace
Microsoft
avoid
It almost goes without saying that Microsoft products and specifically Windows are things to avoid. They treat users terribly and are generally very poorly designed.
A link to a site does not necessarily suggest a personal endorsement of the content provided on that site. I may have just found some content of note at some point and sometimes I'm just interested in reading an alternative opinion to my own.