March 2024 Archive
17071.
James Webb Space Telescope complicates expanding universe paradox (space.com)
17072.
Shiki: A beautiful yet powerful syntax highlighter (shiki.style)
17073.
UxPlay: AirPlay Unix Mirroring Server (github.com)
17074.
Nerdfonts -- Iconic font aggregator, collection, and patcher (nerdfonts.com)
17075.
Boeing 737 loses external panel mid-flight (nypost.com)
17076.
AWS SDK for Embedded C (github.com)
17077.
Coding Sucks Anyway — Matt Welsh on the End of Programming (thenewstack.io)
17078.
17079.
Algorithms Hijacked My Generation. I Fear for Gen Alpha (afterbabel.com)
17080.
Claiming a $20k/mo piece of a crowded market (indiehackers.com)
17081.
How It Works and How to Implement It (lu.sagebl.eu)
17082.
US Baby formula lawsuit wipes £7 Billion off Reckitt (telegraph.co.uk)
17083.
Microsoft defends barging in on Chrome with pop-up ads pushing Bing, GPT-4 (theregister.com)
17084.
EU Parliament Approves EU AI Act (jdsupra.com)
17085.
Endel – Personalized Soundscapes (endel.io)
17086.
Climate change: The 'insane' plan to save the Arctic's sea-ice (bbc.co.uk)
17087.
Why does prompt engineering work? (datascience.stackexchange.com)
17088.
Governments and business like to offload risk to individuals (aeon.co)
17089.
Devin, the first AI software engineer (cognition-labs.com)
17090.
Generating a Docker Image with Nix (fasterthanli.me)
17091.
Are we working more than ever? (ourworldindata.org)
17092.
Operating System Support for Database Management (1981) [pdf] (seas.upenn.edu)
17093.
SAP HANA (en.wikipedia.org)
17094.
DraCo – The Amiga "Clone" (theamigamuseum.com)
17095.
Neal Ford – Granularity and Communication in Microservice Architectures (youtube.com)
17096.
EU approves laws on recycling and human rights that may affect Chinese trade (scmp.com)
17097.
DNA parasite now plays key role in making critical nerve cell protein (arstechnica.com)
17098.
Ask HN: Would you use continuous profiling to help refactor code?
17099.
Vampire squirrel lurks deep in the jungles of Borneo (washingtonpost.com)
17100.
Compressing Chess Moves Even Further, to 3.7 Bits per Move (mbuffett.com)