2022 Archive
11041.
Infants' sense of pain is recognized, finally (1987) (nytimes.com)
11042.
Welcome to Hell, Elon (theverge.com)
11043.
Solar panel waste may not be as bad as we thought (fastcompany.com)
11044.
Work from home and the office real estate apocalypse (papers.ssrn.com)
11045.
Federal Reserve to increase interest rates by 75 basis points for the third time (federalreserve.gov)
11046.
‘Some things never leave you’: Poverty’s indelible marks (longreads.com)
11047.
No, You Aren’t Going to Get Rich by Options Trading (jacobin.com)
11048.
Death Clock (thedeathclock.co)
11049.
Mozilla's call for cryptocurrency donations angers founder (theregister.com)
11050.
The Fake Snow Leopard: Photomontage Spread Around the World (alpinemag.com)
11051.
When cigarette companies used doctors to push smoking (2018) (history.com)
11052.
Why aren't there C conferences? (2018) (nullprogram.com)
11053.
How do poor countries get rich? (thegoodblog.substack.com)
11054.
A forgery scandal that’s roiling PC game collecting (arstechnica.com)
11055.
Vivaldi Mail 1.0: Email client built into the browser (vivaldi.com)
11056.
Free stuff makes us irrational (thehustle.co)
11057.
A sleuth’s guide to the coming wave of corporate fraud (economist.com)
11058.
Backend for Front-end (blog.frankel.ch)
11059.
Hashing is not encryption (eric.mann.blog)
11060.
Iran’s Internet Shutdown Hides a Deadly Crackdown (wired.com)
11061.
A step-by-step guide to our solar system’s demise (nautil.us)
11062.
A small Stripe fraud story (falkus.co)
11063.
Repurposing the cadaver of a spider to create a pneumatically actuated gripper (spectrum.ieee.org)
11064.
This Program is Illegally Packaged in 14 Distributions (artemis.sh)
11065.
'Zero trust’ security is a poor choice of words (code.mendhak.com)
11066.
A day in the life of almost every vending machine (theguardian.com)
11067.
Why Unreal Engine 5.1 is a Deal [video] (youtube.com)
11068.
Learning to think critically about machine learning (news.mit.edu)
11069.
FDA Denies Petition to Ban All Phthalates in Food Packaging (consumerreports.org)
11070.
How we renamed our Design Converter to Magical Ass