January 2021 Archive
2791.
The Geometric Landscapes of Lorenz Stoer (1567) (publicdomainreview.org)
2792.
Sunsets – Exploring Ed Ruscha’s Archive (12sunsets.getty.edu)
2793.
FSF at 35: Why free software matters more than ever (static.fsf.org)
2794.
The Myth of the Megalith (2014) (newyorker.com)
2795.
Chinese billionaire Jack Ma is missing (twitter.com)
2796.
Robinhood are automatically selling shares (twitter.com)
2797.
The true power of regular expressions (nikic.github.io)
2798.
Design flaws of password managers (go350.com)
2799.
Ask HN: Is working for FAANG as big of a deal in Europe as it is in the US??
2800.
Prop 22 Is Here, and It’s Already Worse Than Expected (prospect.org)
2801.
Ask HN: What internet/tech podcasts do you listen to?
2802.
Ask HN: What is the cost to launch a SaaS business MVP
2803.
About hcker news: an unofficial Hacker News interface (hckrnews.com)
2804.
Study Predicts the Amazon Rainforest Will Collapse by 2064 (ecowatch.com)
2805.
Mini-Microsoft (minimsft.blogspot.com)
2806.
Beating Back Cancel Culture: A Case Study from the Field of AI (quillette.com)
2807.
Touchable Bokeh – 3D Printed Wet Plates [video] (youtube.com)
2808.
Show HN: Hurl – Run and test HTTP requests (hurl.dev)
2809.
Cross Language interfaces between C and C++ (2017) (gustedt.wordpress.com)
2810.
The Science of Reasoning with Unreasonable People (nytimes.com)
2811.
Apple begins blocking M1 Mac users from side loading iOS applications (9to5mac.com)
2812.
Google Play bans open-source Matrix client Element, citing “abusive content” (arstechnica.com)
2813.
Software Distributions and Their Roles Today (venam.nixers.net)
2814.
Matt Levine Is Back (bloomberg.com)
2815.
Home Security Tech Hacked into Cameras to Watch People Undressing and Having Sex (buzzfeednews.com)
2816.
Forced Game of Minesweeper on Login (github.com)
2817.
Public Money, Public Code (publiccode.eu)
2818.
Show HN: Cosmic Merge Requests – Git-like workflows for CMS content (cosmicjs.com)
2819.
Wikipedia’s 20th Birthday Website (wikimediafoundation.org)
2820.
GitHub still won’t explain if it fired a Jewish employee for saying 'Nazi' (theverge.com)