July 2021 Archive
4141.
Telephone Industry Moves to Ban Internet Phone Software (1996) (pessimistsarchive.substack.com)
4142.
RimWorld 1.3 and the Ideology Expansion (store.steampowered.com)
4143.
Amazon’s Crackdown on Chinese Sellers (marketplacepulse.com)
4144.
My husband had a stroke after his Covid vaccine. We gave our kid his shot anyway (sfchronicle.com)
4145.
Linux Fu: PDF for Penguins (hackaday.com)
4146.
Runway Sequel: professional video editor made for the web, powered by ML (runwayml.com)
4147.
The Origins of SARS-CoV-2: A Critical Review (zenodo.org)
4148.
Microsoft’s emergency patch fails to fix critical “PrintNightmare” vulnerability (arstechnica.com)
4149.
Google exec will reportedly keep working remote, opposes it for staff (businessinsider.in)
4150.
Amazon.com – Downdetector (downdetector.com)
4151.
Jackie Chan Wants to Join the Chinese Communist Party (cbr.com)
4152.
Faster sorted array unions by reducing branches (lemire.me)
4153.
Processing CDN Logs Exactly-Once with Kafka Transactions (mux.com)
4154.
How the Drivers Cooperative built a worker-owned alternative to Uber and Lyft (fastcompany.com)
4155.
Takeover Power Plants, Hospitals, IoT Devices VNCBruteForce (github.com)
4156.
Viterbi Algorithm (en.wikipedia.org)
4157.
California’s Cliffs Are Collapsing One by One (theatlantic.com)
4158.
Africa’s Covid Crisis Deepens, but Vaccines Are Still Far Off (nytimes.com)
4159.
‘If we don’t go, will we die?’: quarantine guests perish in hotel fire (smh.com.au)
4160.
Sham: A DSL for Fast DSLs (programming-journal.org)
4161.
China Can Lock Up 1M Muslims in Xinjiang at Once (buzzfeednews.com)
4162.
Show HN: .NET Ketchup (dotnetketchup.com)
4163.
Universe 25: The Mouse “Utopia” Experiment That Turned into an Apocalypse (iflscience.com)
4164.
GoatCounter – open-source web analytics (goatcounter.com)
4165.
The Evolution of Bitchiness (theatlantic.com)
4166.
NLP from Zero to Hero tutorials mini-series
4167.
Expanding American Sign Language’s Scientific Vocabulary (cen.acs.org)
4168.
Teach a Course with Zulip for Education (zulip.com)
4169.
A Controversial Tool Calls Out Thousands of Hackable Websites (wired.com)
4170.
Why is China smashing its tech industry? (noahpinion.substack.com)