February 2022 Archive
1711.
Tinc Is Not Catan (github.com)
1712.
SoundPrint: Telling those of us with auditory sensitivities where not to go (accessible.substack.com)
1713.
Digital Advertising in 2022 (stratechery.com)
1714.
CFIREsim 3.0 – Retirement Simulator (cfiresim.com)
1715.
Coral, a Cobra fork with nearly all its features, but only 4 dependencies (github.com)
1716.
Doomed ship of gold’s ghostly picture gallery is plucked from the seabed (theguardian.com)
1717.
Simple XMPP command line client (holmeinbuch.de)
1718.
Uyghur kids recall physical and mental torment in Xinjiang (text.npr.org)
1719.
Atomic Habits of Desire (read.lukeburgis.com)
1720.
The multiple meanings of “nameserver” and “DNS resolver” (jvns.ca)
1721.
I enforced the AGPL on my code (2020) (raymii.org)
1722.
Common Calendrical Fallacies (yourcalendricalfallacyis.com)
1723.
Tim O'Reilly on Web3 (cbsnews.com)
1724.
That’s all folks, for me anyway – Canon Rumors will live on (canonrumors.com)
1725.
Virtual machines with KVM on Pixel 6 and Android 13 DP1 (twitter.com)
1726.
The Future of Tun and Tap VPNs on macOS (2020) (tunnelblick.net)
1727.
Ukraine Invasion dashboard with live news, real-time map, Kyiv webcams (bunkerhub.netlify.app)
1728.
Russia Declares War on Ukraine (usatoday.com)
1729.
Scientists discover centuries-old Arctic creatures surviving on fossils (vice.com)
1730.
Education Department Forgives $415M of For-Profit College Debt (wsj.com)
1731.
FP techniques that will help you write better JavaScript (epicprogrammer.com)
1732.
When I do TDD and when I don’t (codewithjason.com)
1733.
Bitcoin miners revived a dying fossil fuel plant – then CO2 emissions soared (theguardian.com)
1734.
Ask HN: Should HN users be incentivized to use/visit newest submissions?
1735.
Ask HN: Is Gmail spam out of control for everyone else too?
1736.
Facebook shares plunge on weaker-than-expected earnings (cnbc.com)
1737.
Freud's nephew and the origins of public relations (2009) (apa.org)
1738.
Little Sound Dj (littlesounddj.com)
1739.
Russian state news declared victory too soon and quickly deletes article (web.archive.org)
1740.
Researchers shrink camera to the size of a salt grain (designfax.net)