March 2022 Archive
7381.
Nostalgia Can Relieve Pain (newswise.com)
7382.
Ask HN: How would we know if Russian Internet trolls are active here?
7383.
Ask HN: VPS Providers in Russia
7384.
Climate Scientists Are Fed Up and Ready to Go on Strike (nytimes.com)
7385.
Ask HN: Who Wants to Collaborate? (March 2022)
7386.
It's Time to Come Clean – Brandon Sanderson (youtube.com)
7387.
Echo of Moscow (en.wikipedia.org)
7388.
6616 pages of personal data from Russian troops leaked (pravda.com.ua)
7389.
Sberbank, a Russian state-owned bank has been breached (twitter.com)
7390.
Listen in on Unencrypted Russian Military Comms (websdr.ewi.utwente.nl)
7391.
Ukraine: Watching the war on Russian TV – a whole different story (bbc.co.uk)
7392.
Everyone who tells me it is “insecure” without defining a threat model owes $20 (cybre.space)
7393.
Garry Kasparov on Putin’s End Game (youtube.com)
7394.
People of colour fleeing Ukraine attacked by Polish nationalists (theguardian.com)
7395.
PDP-10 (en.wikipedia.org)
7396.
Making Phone calls from a Trolley in 1896 (facebook.com)
7397.
Ukraine's tech community rises to challenges of war (bbc.com)
7398.
IT Army of Ukraine (t.me)
7399.
Millions of Russians Turn to BBC News (bbc.co.uk)
7400.
Why Does the U.S. Buy Russian Oil? (wsj.com)
7401.
War brought Vladimir Putin to power in 1999. Now, it must bring him down (theguardian.com)
7402.
America needs more than innovation; it needs wisdom (theatlantic.com)
7403.
Google stops selling ads in Russia (washingtonpost.com)
7404.
'Ukrainians are built different': The coders still working under Russian bombing (cnbc.com)
7405.
Are tech interviews broken – or is the cruelty the point? (leftalign.substack.com)
7406.
Microsoft halts all new sales in Russia (engadget.com)
7407.
Cost of Ryanair flights from countries bordering Ukraine up to 13 times higher (irishtimes.com)
7408.
Resumption Strategies for Interrupted Programming Tasks (citeseerx.ist.psu.edu)
7409.
What’s to become of Russia’s supercomputers with only mobile, open source left? (theregister.com)
7410.
Volunteer Hackers Converge on Ukraine Conflict with No One in Charge (nytimes.com)