Teletext-Style Portfolio Website
Teletext nostalgia with interactive terminal UI, but mostly visual novelty.

Brutalist 90s web aesthetic wraps a searchable directory of corporate memorabilia.
Corporate memorabilia collectors, retro web enthusiasts
Etsy · eBay
Teletext nostalgia with interactive terminal UI, but mostly visual novelty.
Cyberpunk terminal aesthetic can't hide the vague multi-agent orchestration underneath.
Treats icons like a living design system — generate a full set, then request new icons that match the original style and stroke weight. Offers stroke-thickness controls, SVG/PNG/font exports and commercial licensing, which actually targets a recurring pain point for teams who hate mixing packs; the open question is how well the model handles complex or niche iconography and what the production limits are.
Nostalgic NES UI masks a one-trick utility that ImageMagick, GIMP, and online tools already handle faster.
You can boot actual vintage images in-browser — terminal-only classics like UNIX v4 and GUI-capable builds like early Red Hat or Yggdrasil — and the site treats them like museum exhibits (filters, session counters, random-launch). The real trick is getting decades-old binaries to run in JS/WASM emulators and exposing them in a friendly catalog; it's not completely novel but the curation, UI touches (theme switch, launch modes) and breadth make it delightful and immediately playable. I'd like clearer provenance/links to source images and an obvious repo for the emulation plumbing, but as a demo + learning toy this hits hard.
HTTP 402 micropayments for pay-per-icon SVG generation—genuinely novel payment mechanism.