# BibLinking Recent: - [[Maksim Omariev on 21 Critical Mistakes of a Beginner in Chess📚 in ChessMaster video|On ChessMaster video about a free beginner chess book]] (2026-05-16) - [[21 Critical Mistakes of a Beginner in Chess📚2014|21 Critical Mistakes of a Beginner in Chess📚 (2014, ChessMaster)]] - [[Ryan Singer on Shape Up📚 in SE-Radio📡389|On SE-Radio📡389 about Shape Up (2019, Basecamp)]] (2026-02-03) - [[Shape Up📚2019|Shape Up📚 (2019, Basecamp)]] - [[GoLang on Radio-T📡792|On Radio-T📡792 about GoLang]] (2025-06-09) - [[The Go Programming Language📚2015|📚 The Go Programming Language (2015, O'Reilly)]] - [[Go by Example🌐|🌐 Go by Example]] - [[Domain Driven Design on Radio-T📡792|On Radio-T📡792 about DDD]] (2025-06-08) - [[Learning Domain-Driven Design📚2021|📚 Learning Domain-Driven Design (2021, O'Reilly)]] - [[Domain-Driven Design Distilled📚2016|📚 Domain-Driven Design Distilled (2016, Addison-Wesley)]] - [[Author of FSNotes💾 on Radio-T📡792|On Radio-T📡792 about FSNotes with its author]] (2025-06-07) - [[fsnotes|💾 FSNotes]] ## About BibLinking grows out of a simple pattern: interest in one resource often begins with its appearance inside another. A book becomes worth noting because it was mentioned in an interview, a lecture becomes more interesting because it surfaced in a conversation, a new topic opens up because a trusted speaker pointed toward it. The site follows these paths through stories and topics, preserving not only the references themselves but also the situations in which they became meaningful. That context is the main reason for linking. A resource is easier to judge when it is clear who mentioned it, where it appeared, and what line of thought surrounded it. This makes it easier to decide whether something is worth time and attention, and it also preserves chains of connection that ordinary search often misses, especially brief mentions in interviews, podcasts, and conversations.