SE-UA Net resource atlas

A working library for school, web and regional learning.

SE-UA Net is a practical resource atlas. The pages are written like field notes—short where the topic allows, long where it earns its space—and the library is maintained as an ongoing project, not a one-time push.

Open the resource index

Topics in the library

Each section is a small working collection. The strongest entries link out to focused notes on individual subjects.

Learn

Education and webquests

How to plan a study sequence that a student will actually finish, with examples from school resource pages across the library.

Schools

School resource pages

Notes for teachers and parents working on lesson plans, school projects, and student-facing reference material.

Web

Small-site publishing

HTML basics, accessible page structure, and how to keep a modest resource site clear, light and maintainable.

Radio

Radio and electronics

Antennas, receivers, and the bench habits that turn intermittent gear into something you can rely on.

Build

Architecture projects

Reading a project page, picking materials for an assembly, and avoiding the costly small mistakes.

Auto

Auto community

Vehicle clubs, drivetrain terminology, and workshop glossaries with a focus on diagnosis before parts.

Culture

Local culture

Regional notes that stay close to what can be observed and verified, without editorialising.

Business

Small business

Project documents, contact patterns, and the practical paperwork that keeps a small organisation visible.

Books

Technical books

How to keep a working technical bookshelf: what to read, what to skip, and what to keep for reference.

What the library is for

SE-UA Net began as a place to keep small, useful notes together. Some of the pages are tied to school topics, some to amateur radio, some to small construction subjects, and some to specific regional resources. The collection is multilingual in spirit: navigation is English, but the topics often have natural Ukrainian, Russian and Bulgarian context, and that context is allowed to appear where it helps.

The aim is not to compete with a textbook. It is to keep a working reference—the kind you would write on the back of an envelope and then wish you had kept—and to make those references easy to find again.

Featured notes

A few of the strongest pages worth bookmarking.

How the pages are written

A page in this library should answer one question well. The intro tells you what the page is for. The middle gives the practical detail. The end gives you a short checklist and a sideways link into the rest of the library.

Where a topic is uncertain, the page says so. Where a topic is well understood, the page commits to a recommendation. That is the editorial line, and it applies to every section.

Recently updated

This is a maintained library. Sections are revised when something needs sharpening rather than on a fixed schedule.

  • Resource index search behaviour was tightened.
  • The architecture section gained a clearer materials checklist.
  • The radio section was reorganised so antennas, receivers and bench notes each have their own anchor.
  • The schools section now opens with planning notes rather than a list of links.

For the full set of edits, see the changelog.