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Tiscovery | The Internet’s Most Inventive Maker?

Tiscovery | The Internet’s Most Inventive Maker?
Tiscovery | The Internet’s Most Inventive Maker?
Tiscovery | The Internet’s Most Inventive Maker?
Tiscovery | The Internet’s Most Inventive Maker?
Tiscovery | The Internet’s Most Inventive Maker?

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

The five websites we recommend today all come from the same creator: Neal Agarwal. His personal site, neal.fun, has become one of the most delightful creative corners of today's internet.

Neal is an American programmer and interaction designer with a remarkable creative streak. Around 2017, while still a student, he created neal.fun with a simple and pure intention: to make the internet fun again. Through lightweight interactions, he turns dry data, scientific knowledge, and human history into compelling visual experiences, using curiosity to push back against the internet's boredom and noise.

Today, the site hosts more than 30 interactive projects, and every page is its own creative exploration. With code and imagination, Neal Agarwal proves that one person can leave something genuinely valuable for the entire internet.

Spend Bill Gates' Money is one of his best-known works. Launched in 2017, it is a lighthearted interactive game where players receive a virtual fortune of 100 billion dollars and can freely buy all kinds of items, intuitively feeling the absurd scale of extreme wealth. It also sparked wider public discussion about income inequality.

The Deep Sea invites users to dive vertically into the ocean by scrolling down the page, descending from sunlit shallows all the way to the dark floor of the Mariana Trench while encountering deep-sea creatures along the way. By turning scientific data into an immersive experience, it makes countless people who are curious about, or even afraid of, the ocean keep scrolling downward.

Internet Artifacts is a digital museum of internet history, collecting classic relics from early webpages through the early 2000s, including MySpace, Napster, Homestar Runner, and more. Neal not only recreates the content, but even rebuilds the old Internet Explorer window interface, letting people touch the texture and warmth of an earlier internet.

Size of Life, created in collaboration with scientific illustrator Julius Csotonyi, presents a scale comparison of life from amoebas to blue whales through beautiful hand-drawn illustrations, with no AI used at any point. Gentle background music and delicate visuals create a rare calm, encouraging viewers to slow down while marveling at the diversity of life.

Wonders of Street View gathers strange, beautiful, and absurd moments captured by street-view cameras around the world: odd buildings, unexpected people in frame, and scenes that make you smile. It reminds us that the world itself is a never-ending exhibition of wonders.

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

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

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