Wednesday, April 05 2006

For those who are interested, the following is a non-exhaustive, unsorted list of some of the sites that have been linking in over the past week. I've discovered some great sites in the process of seeing where people are coming from, and thought this might be interesting for others as well.

http://www.reddit.com
http://www.waxy.org
http://www.digg.com
http://www.popurls.com
http://joel.reddit.com
http://www.newsgator.com
http://www.stumbleupon.com
http://www.instantdomainsearch.com
http://www.netvibes.com
http://bella.blog.sme.sk/
http://www.namespros.com
http://jwz.livejournal.com (contains some images that are probably NSFW)
http://del.icio.us
http://www.pageflakes.com
http://www.lifehacker.com
http://www.scripting.com
http://www.bluesnews.com
http://www.megite.com
http://meneame.net
http://tech.memeorandum.com
http://grumpygamer.com
http://blog.guykawasaki.com
http://xo.typepad.com
http://grabun.com
http://oink.elrellano.com
http://www.namedevelopment.com
http://www.scoopeo.com
http://www.icannwatch.org
http://www.hivelogic.com/
http://weblogtoolscollection.com/
http://www.boingboing.net
http://sethgodin.typepad.com
http://www.zefrank.com
http://www.vilaweb.cat
http://www.ollo.net
http://www.usemycomputer.com
http://www.webdesigntimes.com
http://www.plastic.com
http://www.lostremote.com
http://linkfilter.net
http://dirty.ru
http://sandbox.sourcelabs.com
http://www.geekpress.com

None of these are quid pro quo links (though I have gotten several "we've linked you, so please link us" emails, I automatically trash anything along those lines), and all are based on actual referrals.

I apologize if I've missed anyone -- there was a manual process where I verified that they weren't spam sites with mechanical referral stuffing, so these aren't simply a direct copy from the logs. That manual process may have introduced errors and discrepencies.

   

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About the Author
Dennis Forbes Dennis Forbes is a Toronto-based software architect. While focused primarily on the .NET and SQL Server worlds, Dennis frequently ventures outside of this comfort zone into game development and image processing. He has been published in several industry magazines, has been quoted in the Wall Street Journal and has been interviewed by NPR.

He is a vice president and lead software architect at an innovative New York City hedge fund back-office services firm.

Dennis has been working on solutions for the financial, telecommunications, and power generation markets for over 15 years.





 

Dennis Forbes