October 2022 Archive
9241.
This week in KDE: next-generation improvements (pointieststick.com)
9242.
Google wants every account to use 2FA, starts auto-enrolling users (2021) (arstechnica.com)
9243.
9244.
Making the Talos II into the Biggest Power Mac (2018) (tenfourfox.blogspot.com)
9245.
Candy companies financing Russia’s war in Ukraine (euromaidanpress.com)
9246.
The Evolution of Stories (web.archive.org)
9247.
Elon Musk and the Longtermists: What Do They Want? (Sabine Hossenfelder) [video] (youtube.com)
9248.
AI is plundering the imagination and replacing it with a slot machine (thebulletin.org)
9249.
Go 1.19.3 and Go 1.18.8 pre-announcement (groups.google.com)
9250.
Windows worm evolved into slinging ransomware (theregister.com)
9251.
MSCI China Index has delivered 0% return in the nearly 30 years since inception (twitter.com)
9252.
The Why of Y (2001) [pdf] (dreamsongs.com)
9253.
I built an iPhone that charges in 9 minutes (youtube.com)
9254.
You are not depressed, You are distracted (gravitando.wordpress.com)
9255.
The U.S. City of the Future (noahpinion.substack.com)
9256.
Fast, Cheap, and Good Enough (lucca.substack.com)
9257.
Move Fast and Break Things (freddy.lol)
9258.
Dan Hon: A proposal for self-verifying social media federation (newsletter.danhon.com)
9259.
Larry and Sergey's Original Google (Backrub) Paper (infolab.stanford.edu)
9260.
File tagging in the real world (autodidacts.io)
9261.
Is There a Stem Workforce Shortage? (issues.org)
9262.
The Alternative-Science Respectability Checklist (preposterousuniverse.com)
9263.
Types of Circuit Boards (quaxio.com)
9264.
Watch “EU proposes schematics be made available for cellphones” on YouTube (youtube.com)
9265.
Will Elon Musk keep funding Bluesky? (theverge.com)
9266.
California and the history of surveillance (2019) (icwblog.wordpress.com)
9267.
Sub-Replacement Fertility (en.wikipedia.org)
9268.
Hot Job of the Future (axios.com)
9269.
spacytextblob: Open-Source Sentiment Analysis with Spacy (spacy.io)
9270.
NASA caught the sun smiling down on us, but the grin could signal a solar storm (npr.org)