3. Drinkify

4. Radiooooo

6. Forgotify

8. Mubi

9. Geoguessr

10. Open Puppies

12. LibriVox

13. Akinator

14. Calming Manatee

16. MyFridgeFood

17. ManualsLib

Let's waste some time, together.
If you'd like a hand navigating Netflix, this site can help you out. It asks your mood, then gives you a wide selection which you can narrow down further again as you wish.
I'm so sorry for introducing you to this – you will never get any work done again. Little Alchemy is like Minecraft for elements: Combine fire and sand to make glass, combine glass with water to make...well, you'll have to figure that one out.
This neat website suggests drinks pairings for your music collection. It's got its own sense of humour too: I typed "Elle King" and it suggested bourbon and Red Bull.
Radiooooo is strangely absorbing – it allows you to browse music across time and space. You pick a decade (like 1970) and a country (like Brazil), and music from that era begins to stream. It's endlessly fascinating: My favourite thing to do is go through the decades (from 1900) for the same country and listen to the soundtrack change.
This sweet meditation tool makes your worries literally vanish. Just type in what's bothering you, and watch as it shrinks away into nothingness.
Forgotify is on a mission to stream all songs on Spotify. "We were so shocked to learn that millions of Spotify songs had been played only partially or never at all", they write. Join in!
Project Gutenberg has over 50,000 free ebooks. Over 50,000! You need never be stuck for something to read again.
If you ever get overwhelmed by the sheer volume of choice on Netflix, then Mubi is for you. There are only ever 30 movies, with a new one uploaded each day, and an old one taken away. The coolest thing though, is that you can download the movies to your device – which means that unlike Netflix, you can watch films even when you have no internet.
Geoguesser is one of my fave browser games: You are dropped into an unknown location on Google Maps and have to work out where you are. On a good day, there'll be a road sign you can work from. On a bad day, you'll find out that fields look broadly similar the world over.
Just a tab full of widescreen, never-ending puppy GIFs.
The most difficult, most bizarre, and most fun, game on the internet.
If you'd rather listen to your books than read them, LibriVox is the place for you. It has free audiobooks (ones that are in the public domain). The books on offer are varied (from Shakespeare to Frederick Douglass) and there's plenty of poetry too.
Akinator is like a 20 Questions genius: Whatever you're thinking about, he knows. Seriously. In all my years of playing it, the only thing I have managed to defeat it with is "Wishbone the dog, from the TV series Wishbone."
I look at this website an awful lot. Like, a couple of times a day. It's just endless images of manatees saying calming things. What more could you want?
This low-fi and nifty website recommends books based on ones you like. The downside is that there's no filter apart from tags, and no reviews either – so you have to do your own legwork once you get the suggestion.
BTW, here's a good place to start: 34 Young Adult Books Every Feminist Will Love.
If you want something a bit more practical than What The Fuck Should I Make For Dinner, then try My Fridge Food. Tell the website what you've got in stock, and it will suggest your dinner.
For anyone who has ever lost the building instructions to their Ikea Billy Bookcase.
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