April 2023 Archive
2701.
All you need is PHP and jQuery (twitter.com)
2702.
Privilegium Maius (en.wikipedia.org)
2703.
Show HN: Semantic Search on AWS Docs (github.com)
2704.
Athens Charter (en.wikipedia.org)
2705.
Amazon now charges fees for UPS Store returns, forcing Whole Foods dropoffs (twitter.com)
2706.
The recycling warehouse fire reminds: plastics are a pollution nightmare (theverge.com)
2707.
A dot for every second in the day – a clock (clarifyscience.info)
2708.
Twitter deleted a tweet about the FAA grounding of the Starship program (twitter.com)
2709.
New map of Reddit built from 334M comments (anvaka.github.io)
2710.
Opus 1.4 Is Out (lists.xiph.org)
2711.
KeePassXC Responds to ProtonMail's Encryption Claims for Password Manager (twitter.com)
2712.
The Rules of the Games in Tudor England (laphamsquarterly.org)
2713.
New Tools for Building with Generative AI on AWS (aws.amazon.com)
2714.
Datomic Implicit Partitions (blog.datomic.com)
2715.
I downloaded 35 million posts from Hacker News, here's what I've known (wearefastflash.com)
2716.
On Efficient Training of Large-Scale Deep Learning Models: A Literature Review (arxiv.org)
2717.
Twitter's copyright infringement claim against GitHub (theintercept.com)
2718.
How the Great Firewall of China Detects and Blocks Fully Encrypted Traffic (gfw.report)
2719.
The end of nuclear power in Germany (greenpeace.org)
2720.
California is a rooftop solar giant. New rules could change that (canarymedia.com)
2721.
Germany Quits Nuclear Power, Ending a Decades-Long Struggle (nytimes.com)
2722.
Microsoft to change PrintScreen button to open the Snipping Tool in Windows 11 (techspot.com)
2723.
Ask HN: Why isn't BTRFS the default FS in home-oriented Linux distributions?
2724.
Startup CEOs learned engineering management from captain kirk (amazingcto.com)
2725.
How Much Longer Can Twitter Last, Really? (every.to)
2726.
Kids Toys Suck (2011) (jesda.com)
2727.
Deduplicate a slice in Go, use sort or a map? (boyter.org)
2728.
The dream of polio eradication might need a rethink (npr.org)
2729.
Jerry Springer has died (wlwt.com)
2730.
Ask HN: Was programming more interesting when memory usage was a concern?