I'm a programmer who's been tinkering with code since 1994. My first experiments ran on MS-DOS and early versions of Windows, and every step taught me something new - sometimes as simple as printing "Hello, World!" on the screen.
Over the years I've built more than a hundred tiny programs and test apps. Many stayed unfinished on my hard drive, until now. Here, each project - no matter how small - gets its own home. Think of it as a gallery of Hello World experiments: small, minimal, and focused on learning.
Right now you'll find BeepChecker, a simple Hello World utility for playing and testing Windows beep sounds. In the coming months, I'll release more of my experiments: from basic console apps to small GUIs and simple scripts.
Every app on this site is open source under the MIT License. You can browse the code, suggest changes, or just see how they work. If you like what you see, drop a star on GitHub - it's a small gesture that goes a long way.
I'm always humbled when even the smallest Hello World programs get unexpected praise - like BeepChecker's reviews on Softpedia, I Love Free Software, and Rocky Bytes. It reminds me that what starts as a tiny experiment can still find real users and spark someone's curiosity, which is exactly why I share each little project here.
Thanks for stopping by. I hope these tiny projects spark your curiosity - maybe inspire your own Hello World moment.