October 2025 Archive
361.
Boring Company cited for almost 800 environmental violations in Las Vegas (propublica.org)
362.
Dutch spy services have restricted intelligence-sharing with the United States (intelnews.org)
363.
Pixnapping Attack (pixnapping.com)
364.
Poker Tournament for LLMs (pokerbattle.ai)
365.
DoorDash and Waymo launch autonomous delivery service in Phoenix (about.doordash.com)
366.
People with blindness can read again after retinal implant and special glasses (nbcnews.com)
367.
Kirigami-inspired parachute falls on target (physicsworld.com)
368.
Datastar: Lightweight hypermedia framework for building interactive web apps (data-star.dev)
369.
Why I code as a CTO (assembled.com)
370.
Beginner Guide to VPS Hetzner and Coolify (bhargav.dev)
371.
AWS Outage: A Single Cloud Region Shouldn't Take Down the World. But It Did (faun.dev)
372.
A definition of AGI (arxiv.org)
373.
Nvidia takes $1B stake in Nokia (cnbc.com)
374.
LLMs are mortally terrified of exceptions (twitter.com)
375.
Magic Wormhole: Get things from one computer to another, safely (magic-wormhole.readthedocs.io)
376.
Paged Out Issue #7 [pdf] (pagedout.institute)
377.
HTTPS by default (security.googleblog.com)
378.
Feed the bots (maurycyz.com)
379.
Subway Builder: A realistic subway simulation game (subwaybuilder.com)
380.
Intercellular communication in the brain through a dendritic nanotubular network (science.org)
381.
React vs. Backbone in 2025 (backbonenotbad.hyperclay.com)
382.
Police Said They Surveilled Woman Who Had an Abortion for Her 'Safety.' (404media.co)
383.
Microsoft in court for allegedly misleading Australians over 365 subscriptions (accc.gov.au)
384.
A History of Large Language Models (gregorygundersen.com)
385.
TigerBeetle is a most interesting database (amplifypartners.com)
386.
FocusTube: A Chrome extension that hides YouTube Shorts (github.com)
387.
We need a clearer framework for AI-assisted contributions to open source (samsaffron.com)
388.
FBI Agents Visit Anti-ICE Protester: "Your name was brought up." (kenklippenstein.com)
389.
A visualization of the RGB space covered by named colors (codepen.io)
390.
Way past its prime: how did Amazon get so rubbish? (theguardian.com)