Last Modified-
2011-03-11 16:49:36
2011-03-12 20:10:09
2011-03-12 20:46:07
2011-03-11 17:07:12
2011-03-12 10:52:24
Hi, my name is Khánh, but i go by khanhsers or lhanhs.I reside in Vietnam currently, and I am bisexual male. I am taken.My hobbies include coding, UI designing, and gaming. I prefer FOSS over proprietary software. Long live FOSS.I listen to Porter Robinson, James Ivy, Astrale, clayekea, and N33T.My favorite food is sushi. My favorite drink is lychee tea.Contact me at [email protected].
I am familiar with Linux system administration, as I have used it for 4 years.I mostly code in Python, but I can also read and write C++ code.Additionally, I'm also familiar with HTML and basic CSS.
My design philosophy begins with the belief that the web should be fundamentally readable, durable, and unencumbered. Content is the interface. Pure HTML is not a limitation but a commitment to universality, longevity, and accessibility across devices, browsers, and time itself. In this view, “design” is not decoration, but careful subtraction until only what is essential remains.Mirror websites in particular embody this ethic by rejecting dependency on complex frameworks, scripts, and visual noise. They prioritize replication over reinvention, ensuring information remains stable, lightweight, and resilient. Minimalism here is not emptiness but clarity. The ideal interface is one where nothing stands between the user and the text.This approach also strengthens accessibility by aligning directly with how assistive technologies interpret the web. When content is built using semantic HTML elements, such as headings, lists, landmarks, and inline meaning tags like <em> for emphasis or <strong> for importance, it becomes inherently navigable for screen readers and other adaptive tools. Instead of relying on visual styling cues that may be invisible to non-visual users, meaning is embedded in the structure itself. A screen reader can move through a well-formed document predictably, jumping between sections, interpreting hierarchy, and conveying emphasis without ambiguity. A minimalist, structure-first design philosophy naturally reinforces this inclusivity, because when meaning is carried by the document itself rather than by decorative presentation, the experience becomes more universally accessible and resilient.
Last Modified-
2012-01-27 17:03:15
2012-01-20 23:56:32
2011-05-12 23:59:37
This is a personal website. It intentionally resembles a typical Apache-style directory listing, similar to what you might see on public file mirrors. The structure, plain layout, and index-style navigation are intentional, favoring simplicity and utility over modern web design conventions.I've always found bare/pure HTML interesting when I was younger. The minimalist design didn't look half-bad, and it was very utilitarian. As such, I've tried to re-create this style on my website. It's not a faithful 1:1 recreation, but it comes pretty dang close.Anyway, just enjoy your time here.
I do not wish to interact you if you fit any of these criteria. These criteria are non-negotiable.Pedophile, or support pedophiles
Zoophile, or support zoophilia
Transphobic, homophobic, or any form of queerphobic.
Sexist, misogynistic, misandrist
AbleistBasically, just be a decent human being.