Piperic
similar sites
‹ ProfileAI ReportTools

Sites similar to garysite.com

Gary Bergman's Personal Site · ranked by shared content topics & relevance
73match
24natel.com
Nathan's Personal Website
2 shared topicsprogramming-languages
70match
ethanmcox.com
Ethan | Personal Website
2 shared topicstechnology-and-computing
68match
nurgasemetey.com
Nurgazy Nazhimidinov's Personal Website
2 shared topicsprogramming-languages
68match
krishkrish.com
krish's personal website • home
2 shared topicstechnology-and-computing
68match
rigobreaksprod.com
Welcome to my personal wiki
2 shared topicsprogramming-languages
68match
magarcia.io
magarcia — A personal blog
2 shared topicsprogramming-languages
67match
camtsmith.com
Cameron Smith | Personal Website
2 shared topicstechnology-and-computing
67match
cooperm.com
Cooper Maruyama - Personal website
2 shared topicsprogramming-languages
67match
maggiecycy.com
Maggie | Personal Portfolio
2 shared topicstechnology-and-computing
66match
garykrause.dev
Gary in Binary | A personal blog website with random musings.
2 shared topicstechnology-and-computing
65match
heyws.com
Wen's Site
2 shared topicsprogramming-languages
64match
surenk.com
Suren's Site
2 shared topicstechnology-and-computing
64match
supersonicbyte.com
supersonicbyte
2 shared topicstechnology-and-computing
64match
herongyang.com
Herong's Tutorial Examples
2 shared topicsprogramming-languages
63match
andersonkoh.com
andersonkoh
2 shared topicstechnology-and-computing
63match
ishanupamanyu.com
Ishan's Blog
2 shared topicsprogramming-languages
63match
techfortalk.uk 🇬🇧
Tech For Talk – A Tech Site for Software Professionals
2 shared topicstechnology-and-computing
63match
techfortalk.co.uk 🇬🇧
Tech For Talk – A Tech Site for Software Professionals
2 shared topicstechnology-and-computing

How the match score works

Each match is a 0–100 similarity score — the higher it is, the more two sites resemble one another. It’s computed automatically from our own crawl data (never from what a site says about itself) by combining several independent signals, so a high score means several of them point the same way:

No single signal decides the result — they’re blended together. Treat the score as a way to rank candidates rather than an absolute percentage; the chips on each result show which signals contributed.