May 2023 Archive
12331.
Docker swarm on bare metal in 10 minutes (christianscott.io)
12332.
Tokyo in 1999 (youtube.com)
12333.
The Rising Threat of Malicious Extensions in Microsoft’s VSCode Marketplace (programmingeeksclub.com)
12334.
Jack (Baboon) (en.wikipedia.org)
12335.
Python: The Key to Unlocking Your Scientific Potential (medium.com)
12336.
Early days of 3D polygons on home consoles (twitter.com)
12337.
Mars After Midnight: Face Generator Updates (dukope.itch.io)
12338.
Websurfx – A modern looking fast, privacy repecting secure meta search engine (old.reddit.com)
12339.
Understanding ChatGPT prompt engineering through plug-ins manifests (pretzelbox.cc)
12340.
National Semiconductor Strategy (gov.uk)
12341.
Get better maintainability in web projects with model-view-controller pattern (stackoverflow.blog)
12342.
12343.
What watching my daughter play ‘The Legend of Zelda’ taught me (washingtonpost.com)
12344.
The Case for Shame (vox.com)
12345.
After 20 opensource years of iText 1, iText 8 has just landed (itextpdf.com)
12346.
Certified Anti-Piracy Coach Helps Piracy Addicts Go Legal (torrentfreak.com)
12347.
Used diapers can be turned into reinforced concrete (lemonde.fr)
12348.
The ChatGPT Memory Project (redis.com)
12349.
”Dealing with kidnappers is easy” (theguardian.com)
12350.
Douglas Adams' Hitchhiker's Guide Gets a Glorious New Folio Society Edition (gizmodo.com)
12351.
Physicists Make Matter Out of Light to Find Quantum Singularities (scientificamerican.com)
12352.
The Legend of Zelda Put Video Game Concerts on the Map (pitchfork.com)
12353.
AMD Now Powers 121 of the Fastest Supercomputers (tomshardware.com)
12354.
The Supreme Court and 'The Shadow Docket' (npr.org)
12355.
US bomb designed to hit targets like underground nuclear sites briefly reappears (apnews.com)
12356.
We are dropping support for Next.js (stormkit.io)
12357.
Open Contributions Project (opencontributions.dev)
12358.
Epstein Appeared to Threaten Gates over Affair with Russian Bridge Player (wsj.com)
12359.
Lego’s latest nostalgia play is a 2,561-piece Pac-Man cabinet with moving parts (arstechnica.com)
12360.
Digital Sound in DOS Games Without a Sound Blaster (nerdlypleasures.blogspot.com)