2023 Archive
5281.
Cloth Simulation (oimo.io)
5282.
iVentoy (iventoy.com)
5283.
Exploring Linux command-line space time (fabiensanglard.net)
5284.
Amazon Prime Video starts showing ads in January unless you pay $2.99/month xtra (9to5google.com)
5285.
Why does nuclear power plant construction cost so much? (progress.institute)
5286.
We come to bury ChatGPT, not to praise it (danmcquillan.org)
5287.
Starlink internet is going from rural savior to unreliable luxury (xda-developers.com)
5288.
Neuropsychiatric researchers rethink what depression might be (quantamagazine.org)
5289.
It happened to me today: $80/hr writer replaced with ChatGPT (old.reddit.com)
5290.
What does Silicon Valley Bank’s collapse mean for the financial system? (economist.com)
5291.
Early Remote Work Impacts on Family Formation (eig.org)
5292.
DeepFloyd IF: open-source text-to-image model (github.com)
5293.
Leveraging Rust and the GPU to render user interfaces at 120 FPS (zed.dev)
5294.
Sam Altman's knack for dodging bullets with a little help from bigshot friends (wsj.com)
5295.
Breaking RSA with a quantum computer? (schneier.com)
5296.
The `hanging-punctuation property` in CSS (chriscoyier.net)
5297.
Astro framework lowers competitors by ~40% on performance graph to looks better (twitter.com)
5298.
Google contractors vote to unionize in historic landslide election (sfgate.com)
5299.
My Failure Resume (dare.fail)
5300.
The 2002 Überlingen midair collision (admiralcloudberg.medium.com)
5301.
Windows Sandbox (learn.microsoft.com)
5302.
EleutherAI announces it has become a non-profit (blog.eleuther.ai)
5303.
The Joy of Computer History Books (fabiensanglard.net)
5304.
Launch HN: Refine (YC S23) – Open-source platform for enterprise web apps
5305.
Erlang/OTP 26 Highlights (erlang.org)
5306.
Google just shut down our $1M business
5307.
Chat Notebooks (writings.stephenwolfram.com)
5308.
SQLite-based databases on the Postgres protocol (blog.chiselstrike.com)
5309.
What we talk about when we talk about system design (maheshba.bitbucket.io)
5310.
September was the most anomalously hot month ever (scientificamerican.com)