April 2023 Archive
1381.
Quantum physics falls apart without imaginary numbers (scientificamerican.com)
1382.
Apple will launch a journaling app (arstechnica.com)
1383.
Canonical releases Ubuntu 23.04 Lunar Lobster (canonical.com)
1384.
The influencers getting rich by teaching you how to get rich (vox.com)
1385.
Google will shut down Dropcam and Nest Secure in 2024 (theverge.com)
1386.
Sailcargo (sailcargo.inc)
1387.
The outside investigation of SoftRAM 95 (2021) (devblogs.microsoft.com)
1388.
Swarm (vitling.xyz)
1389.
WebAssembly+WebUSB port of the SANE scanner library (github.com)
1390.
Calculating Position from Raw GPS Data (2017) (telesens.co)
1391.
Better Together: Unifying Datalog and Equality Saturation (arxiv.org)
1392.
RISC on a Chip: David Patterson and Berkeley RISC-I (thechipletter.substack.com)
1393.
CardStock (github.com)
1394.
Permutation Group Visualizer (permutation-groups.glitch.me)
1395.
Stop Telling Everyone What You Do for a Living (wsj.com)
1396.
Chemist Rafael Luque suspended without pay for thirteen years (english.elpais.com)
1397.
The US Wants to Close an ‘SUV Loophole’ That Supersized Cars (wired.com)
1398.
AMD’s 7950X3D: Zen 4 Gets VCache (chipsandcheese.com)
1399.
The curious side effects of medical transparency (newyorker.com)
1400.
The Magic of Rails: exploring the principles and techniques behind the framework (speakerdeck.com)
1401.
Run Linux Programs on DOS (github.com)
1402.
Hacking Google ReCAPTCHA v3 Using Reinforcement Learning (2019) (arxiv.org)
1403.
AI / ML / LLM / Transformer Models Timeline (ai.v-gar.de)
1404.
Whole Foods closes San Francisco flagship after one year, citing worker safety (cnn.com)
1405.
GNU Pascal (2005) (gnu-pascal.de)
1406.
How close are we to the holy grail of room-temperature superconductors? (forbes.com)
1407.
The Egison Programming Language (egison.org)
1408.
QSL Card (en.wikipedia.org)
1409.
Show HN: Chrome extension to hide AI/GPT related submissions from HN (chrome.google.com)
1410.
When you buy a book, you can loan it to anyone – a judge says libraries can’t (thenation.com)