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Tiscovery | One Piece, Bruce Lee, and Chainsaw Killers

Tiscovery | One Piece, Bruce Lee, and Chainsaw Killers
Tiscovery | One Piece, Bruce Lee, and Chainsaw Killers
Tiscovery | One Piece, Bruce Lee, and Chainsaw Killers

This is Tabbit's discovery channel. Every week, we share interesting sites that caught our eye while using Tabbit Browser.

1 Floor796

A pixel-art animated universe set on "Floor 796 of a giant space station." The entire site is an enormous animated canvas packed with classic characters and absurd scenes from movies, anime, comics, games, and other corners of pop culture: Jack Sparrow boards the Going Merry, Bruce Lee plays table tennis with robots using nunchucks, and the Texas Chainsaw killer is forced to read in a library. The whole world feels like a casual after-work party and everyday life for classic characters. You can drag freely across the canvas, click different areas to see the source works, and discover hidden Easter eggs everywhere.

The project was created in 2018 by Belarusian programmer Pavel Sannikau, also known as 0x00, who even built custom animation software for it. New content is added every month, and the scene keeps expanding over time. For pop-culture lovers, Floor796 feels like a never-ending Easter egg hunt.

2 Hacker Typer

A simulated programming site made for "pretending to be a hacker." Open it and tap any keys; professional-looking "hacker code" automatically scrolls across the screen. With its black background and green text, it instantly creates the intrusion atmosphere of a Hollywood movie.

The site includes several dramatic effects: press Alt three times to trigger a green "ACCESS GRANTED" popup, press Caps Lock three times to show a red "ACCESS DENIED" warning, and use Shift key combinations to trigger system breach alerts, GPS tracking, and other flashy effects.

Of course, all of this only looks professional. It has no real hacking capability. It is simply a lighthearted prank tool that lets you enjoy the fantasy for a moment.

3 Making Software

A digital reference manual written and hand-illustrated by design engineer Dan Hollick. Think of it as a popular science book focused on explaining how computer software works. It does not teach you how to code or operate software; instead, through diagrams and animated visuals, it explains to curious readers why touchscreens can sense fingers, the math behind Gaussian blur, how Bezier curves shape vector graphics, and how rasterization turns mathematical curves into screen pixels.

The full book is planned for 33 chapters covering pixels and color, fonts and vectors, 3D graphics, AI and machine learning, data compression, networks and the internet, compilers, and more. Fifteen chapters have been completed so far, with more than 50,000 words and 548 illustrations, all with a highly polished sense of design. The author insists on creating everything by hand and uses no AI-generated content.

That is all for today's sharing. Tell us in the comments:

Which of these three sites are you most interested in trying?

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