May 2023 Archive
15091.
Docusaurus 2.4 (docusaurus.io)
15092.
New biocomputing uses enzymes as catalysts for DNA-based molecular computing (phys.org)
15093.
The Great Moose Migration (svtplay.se)
15094.
Deepfakes will not be a problem. We need open-source LLMs (web.archive.org)
15095.
Don’t Build a General Purpose API to Power Your Own Front End (max.engineer)
15096.
GradIEEEnt half decent: The hidden power of imprecise lines [video] (youtube.com)
15097.
OpenAI gives in to Italy’s data privacy demands, ending ChatGPT ban (arstechnica.com)
15098.
[deleted]
15099.
DevOps Capabilities (cloud.google.com)
15100.
Lego Technic 42158 NASA Mars Rover Perseverance Coming June 2023 (jaysbrickblog.com)
15101.
Nintendo Switch modding is illegal in the US (gabrielsieben.tech)
15102.
Nikola – Static Site Generator (getnikola.com)
15103.
SpaceX's Texas Rocket Caused a Big Mess – What's Next? (blog.esghound.com)
15104.
Why Split Lexing and Parsing into Two Separate Phases? (tratt.net)
15105.
Synit – A Reactive Operating System (synit.org)
15106.
Blue checks reappear on Twitter if you update your bio, lmao (techcrunch.com)
15107.
CrawlSpider and link extractors for rule-based crawling in Scrapy (trickster.dev)
15108.
ClickHouse Anti-Patterns (youtube.com)
15109.
Educational-transformer: Educational PyTorch implementation of the transformer (github.com)
15110.
I Challenged My AI Clone to Replace Me for 24 Hours [video] (youtube.com)
15111.
Real User Monitoring (en.wikipedia.org)
15112.
The Future of Fertility (newyorker.com)
15113.
Guardrails (profgalloway.com)
15114.
Evidence of conscious-like activity in the dying brain (sciencedaily.com)
15115.
Vice Media preparing to file for bankruptcy (reuters.com)
15116.
The Internet Isn’t Meant to Be So Small (defector.com)
15117.
Linux 6.4 Lands Concurrent I/O Performance Optimizations for Device Mapper (phoronix.com)
15118.
Implementing LLMs in the Browser (matt-rickard.com)
15119.
Elon Musk provides detailed review of Starship’s first launch–and what’s next (arstechnica.com)
15120.
AMD's Zen 4 Phoenix Pictured: FP7 and FP8 CPUs Exposed (tomshardware.com)