Everything currently stored by the Discofork backend.
Browse cached briefs and queued lookups in one place. Open any row to read the repository summary and fork comparisons.
A highly popular but apparently inactive educational repository for a 100-day machine learning coding challenge. It contains day-by-day ML notes, code markdowns, infographics, datasets, and contribution docs, with no visible sign of a packaged library or application. The repo has strong fork/stars traction, but the latest recorded commit activity is old, so forks are most interesting as learning-material derivatives rather than as a foundation for active software.
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A highly starred, long-running reference repo for Git and GitHub tips. It is a documentation-only project: the tree is centered on README files in multiple languages, plus contribution, license, CI, and GitHub metadata files. The latest recorded code activity is a sponsor-related change in 2023, and the repo is not archived.
`xingshaocheng/architect-awesome` is a Chinese-language, README-driven “backend architect technology map” repository. It appears to be a curated learning index rather than runnable software: the repo is essentially a single large README plus one image, and its history shows mostly documentation updates. It is very popular, with 60,832 stars and 17,761 forks.
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A small Node.js/JavaScript repo that maintains the Big List of Naughty Strings: a curated set of problematic user-input strings for QA and validation testing. It is popular and widely forked, but the commit history shown is old, with recent activity ending in 2021 even though the repo was updated in 2026. Forks are most interesting if they add new strings, new sections, or language/tool-specific packaging around the same dataset.
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funNLP is a large Chinese NLP resource hub rather than an implementation-heavy library. The repo is mainly a curated, frequently updated README plus a `data` directory, collecting links, datasets, tools, papers, and code across topics like preprocessing, extraction, QA, generation, search, sentiment, speech, knowledge graphs, and LLM-related resources.
Highly starred, heavily forked Golang ebook repository for learning how to build web applications with Go. It is a multilingual documentation/book project, not an application or library, and the latest recorded commit activity is from 2022 while the repo was updated in 2026.
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dypsilon/frontend-dev-bookmarks is a large, manually curated frontend web development resource index. It is organized into many category files plus one all-in-one file, and it appears to be a mature, widely forked reference repo rather than an application or library. Its last recorded commits are from 2018, while the repo metadata was updated recently.
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CompVis/stable-diffusion is the original Stable Diffusion repository: a latent text-to-image diffusion model with a large ecosystem footprint (about 72.8k stars and 10.6k forks). It is a research-oriented codebase for training and running Stable Diffusion v1, with pretrained weights, a model card, and a permissive-but-restricted OpenRAIL M license. The repo appears mature and largely inactive since 2022, so forks are most interesting if they add features, newer samplers, safety changes, UI/inference tooling, or maintenance updates.
normalize.css is a small, mature CSS library that provides a modern alternative to CSS resets. It is widely forked and starred, ships as a single `normalize.css` file plus package metadata, and appears stable with no recent feature churn in the provided history. Forks are most interesting if you want a minimal, well-documented baseline stylesheet to customize rather than a large framework.
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Algorithm Visualizer is a popular open source web app for visualizing algorithms from code. It is a React/Node.js project with a large fork count and stars, and the repository appears mature but not very actively changed recently, with the latest recorded commit in November 2023 and the repo updated in March 2026. Forks are most interesting if you want to extend the visualization UI, add algorithm demos, or work on the broader ecosystem around the app, server, and language tracers.
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