__               __         __               __
.----.-----.|  |_.----.-----.|__|.-----.|  |_.-----.----.|  |.---.-.----.-----.
|   _|  -__||   _|   _|  _  ||  ||     ||   _|  -__|   _||  ||  _  |  __|  -__|
|__| |_____||____|__| |_____||__||__|__||____|_____|__|  |__||___._|____|_____|	
				

RetroInterlace is designed to be extremely simple and very accessible. As a consequence, it doesn't look flashy or "modern" like most people expect. I don't care. I'm not trying to sell anything, nor am I trying to impress anyone.

I am a person who likes C Programming, Unix (particularly BSD), technological minimalism, and certain aspects of "the good-old days".
I am attempting, to the best of my ability to create a website that reflects the above sentence.

This site is generated by piecing together hand-written modules in HTML, a very small CSS stylesheet, and a series of shell scripts to paste it all together. This results in a website that is both small, efficient, and consistent while being easily editable.

My principles in web design are described here. Simply put, I think that all websites should be made to work with as many web browsers, and as slow of a network connection as possible. And that it should be freely accessible to all with permissive licensing, though not necessarily for commercial use.