April 2023 Archive
1921.
Microsoft agrees to stop bundling Teams with Office (ft.com)
1922.
Passing the Reins on Panfrost (rosenzweig.io)
1923.
Genetic circuitry boosts cell longevity (science.org)
1924.
Points on Cartooning (1937) (mikelynchcartoons.blogspot.com)
1925.
Pythia: A Suite for Analyzing Large Language Models Across Training and Scaling (arxiv.org)
1926.
Common Crawl (commoncrawl.org)
1927.
Arrest made in Bob Lee killing; suspect was tech exec (sfchronicle.com)
1928.
Ask HN: Is Satya Nadella the best tech CEO of last decade?
1929.
Bay Area couple shocked by $200K hospital bill for rabies shots (abc7news.com)
1930.
More Young Adults Are Living Paycheck to Paycheck in the US (bloomberg.com)
1931.
Protesters storm BlackRock’s Paris office (cnn.com)
1932.
Universities should return to oral exams in the AI and ChatGPT era (theconversation.com)
1933.
OpenAI has temporarily stopped selling the Plus plan (old.reddit.com)
1934.
A Low Cost Approach to Improving Pedestrian Safety with Deep Learning (nathanrooy.github.io)
1935.
Show HN: I built a website editor for TailwindCSS (webase.com)
1936.
HPC is dying, and MPI is killing it (2015) (dursi.ca)
1937.
Was MPLS Traffic Engineering Worthwhile? (systemsapproach.substack.com)
1938.
The Madness in our Methods: Crash of GW9525 and our broken aeromedical system (admiralcloudberg.medium.com)
1939.
Cash App founder Bob Lee had left San Francisco over crime (independent.co.uk)
1940.
NPM Provenance Public Beta (github.blog)
1941.
Microsoft drops Twitter from its advertising platform (mashable.com)
1942.
High Speed Printed Circuit Board (PCB) Design Guidelines (2022) (pcb-hero.com)
1943.
Show HN: A readable macroassembler for .NET that no one asked for (github.com)
1944.
Ways to Put Lasers on Silicon (spectrum.ieee.org)
1945.
Protect your homelab with mutual TLS, ACME device attestation, and a Yubikey (smallstep.com)
1946.
A Tale of Three Real-Time OLAP Databases: Apache Pinot, Apache Druid, ClickHouse (startree.ai)
1947.
PostgreSQL Logical Replication Gotchas (pgdash.io)
1948.
Liubo: Ancient Chinese board game originally played from about 500 BCE to 500 CE (liubolab.itch.io)
1949.
1950.
Will we run out of ML data? Evidence from projecting dataset size trends (2022) (epochai.org)