Spare time projects
From time to time I get this akward urge to do something. Most of the time, I get the urge to do something cool. Of course, your standards as to what is considered cool and what isn't might be different from mine.
That's partly because most of the things that gave me that "I've got to try this project"-feeling where programming projects. But anyways, over the course of the years there was quite a lot of code I considered "cool". Here's a bunch of the better stuff I did. Some of it might be cool or useful even to you, while some might be simply funny to look at or might give you that "WTF"-stare people usually get when I tell them about my projects.
Categories
- actually useful: The few things I've written in my life that might actually be used for something ;)
- code dump: well, this code is here for... uhm... your amusement, maybe ;)
- cool: The projects I consider to be cool ;)
- games: Some small games I wrote
- graphics: some cool graphic effects and stuff
- old stuff: some really old code, here only for your amusement ;)
- screensaver: some screensavers I wrote back in the day
- study-related: things related to my studies. Everything homework to serious (?) science ;p
- web: all the projects that are somehow related to the web: scripts for homepages etc.
- writing: Some things I wrote.
Legal stuff
All of the projects are distributed without any warranty; without even the implied warranty of merchantability or fitness for a particular purpose. If they crash your PC, though luck. If they start World War 3 - not my fault, dude. Whatever happenes: you try the programs on your own risk!
Usually all programs come with source code and should a include license explaining the legal stuff. In case they don't, you can redistribute them unter a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-Share Alike 3.0 Unported License. The programms are written in a variety of programming languages, and I cannot guarantee that they'll work properly (many of them have known bugs, actually ;p). Most of them should run under either Windows or Linux and should at least be compiliable under both (except for the older stuff, which might not run under anything other than Windows).