Here is a list of sites I find more or less useful and that I re-visit often or recommend to friends. I guess you can tell something about me depending on what I link to here. I'll leave that as an exercise to the reader. Also check out my homepage, with links to sites I visit almost every day.
Geraint Bevan's excellent list of beers and breweries with notes if the products are suitable for vegans.
Note that the absolute majority of the beer with an origin in Sweden and Denmark (I live in Sweden, very close to Denmark) is vegan by tradition. The only stuff to be suspicious about is when a brewery decides to do an ale or stout in the Anglo-Saxic brewing tradition.
Vegan wines sorted by country of origin. Sadly, not many of these are available in Sweden.
A shop for shoes not made of leather. Great products, especially the Airseal range. My first pair of Airseal Paratrooper Boots lasted over seven years!
I also have a pair of vegan shoes from Underground.
I buy some personal hygiene products made by the danish company Urtekram. Note that not all of their products are vegan.
The largest Swedish animal rights group.
People for the Ethical Treatmeant of Animals, the largest US animal rights group.
A tremendously in-depth collection of answers to frequently asked questions on the subject of Libertarian Socialism or Anarchism.
In my experience, the most often asked question is answered in Section I, What would an Anarchist society look like?.
An archive of images and writing on Libertarian Socialism I founded in 1993 with my net.friends Ian (RIP!), Jack and Chuck0. I haven't been involved for many years now, and neither has anyone else, but the archive is still there.
In 1992 I helped Chuck0 bring his zine Practical Anarchy online as an e-mail magazine. It lives on as the official online magazine of The Mid-Atlantic Infoshop.
A Swedish Libertarian Socialist weekly.
The largest US organisation for scientific scepticism.
The largest Swedish organisation for scientific scepticism.
A Collection of Strange Beliefs, Amusing Deceptions, and Dangerous Delusions.
Computer Incident Advisory Capability's Hoax Busters helps you identify extraordinary warnings (usually delivered by e-mail) as hoaxes.
A magazine for strange phenomena in the tradition of Charles Fort.
Information from whistleblowers worldwide.
John Young's Cryptome Archive. More whistleblowing, with focus mostly on the US.
My favourite production quality operating system.
New free programs for you! A site that publishes news about free programs every day, indexed per category et cetera.
You can also follow the announcements through their NNTP interface by
reading the fm.announce and the fm.articles newsgroups at
news.freshmeat.net. However, there are a lot of announcements
these days.
Granted, most of the projects here are abondonware, but sometimes you can find a gem you knew nothing about.
A large collection of useful stuff if you're programming in the C programming language.
Professor Daniel J. Bernstein keeps a lot of interesting papers and software available, many focusing on security.
Peter Gutmann is a Cryptography researcher who has published lots of interesting things on his web site.
Cryptography researcher Bruce Schneier, among other things, regularly publishes his newsletter Crypto-gram.
I subscribe to only a few Usenet newsgroups, mostly about old computers, programming and cryptography. The newsgroup alt.folklore.computers is worth a special mention. It's a tremendous high volume group mostly about computer history, tales, folklore and thread drift.
I subscribe to a whole lot of mailing lists, but I read most of them through my News and mail client Gnus using Lars Magne Ingebrigtsen's wonderful Gmane mail to News gateway. Most of the mailing lists I follow deal with FreeBSD, NetBSD, Emacs, the IETF and announcement lists for software I use.
I listen to a lot of music, mostly offline, but some Internet 'radios' are more interesting than others.
Dark Side of the Net. Gothic/Dark/Industrial Internet Online Radio Stations.
EBM Radio. EBM, industrial and other hard and noisy electronic music. Ogg Vorbis stream
Slayradio Commodore 64 remixes. 128 kbit/s stream. Stream over IPv6.
Jamie "jwz" Zawinski's DNA Lounge. Broadcasts live on the net.
Vogon Variety. The best industrial and goth club in Malmö, Sweden.
Spacelab. Nice pub evenings in Malmö with synth pop played by Alexander "Android" Hofman of S.P.O.C.K.
Neostalgia. Another industrial and synth pop club in Malmö.
The Black Cat. Goth club in Copenhagen, Denmark.
Trash Can Club. Underground rock & roll in Malmö.