May 2024 Archive
2161.
Asteroid that broke up over Berlin was fastest-spinning one ever seen (newscientist.com)
2162.
AlphaFold3 – why did Nature publish it without its code? (nature.com)
2163.
C++ Core Guidelines (isocpp.github.io)
2164.
In medieval England, leprosy spread btwn red squirrels/people, genome evidence (phys.org)
2165.
China rolls out large language model based on Xi Jinping Thought (scmp.com)
2166.
One South African community stopped Shell oil in its tracks (e360.yale.edu)
2167.
Stereogram Tutorial (2020) (ime.usp.br)
2168.
A week with Elixir (2013) (joearms.github.io)
2169.
After you die, your Steam games will be stuck in legal limbo (arstechnica.com)
2170.
Kdenlive 24.05 open source video editor released (kdenlive.org)
2171.
When 'Lol, No' Is Not Enough: Why Bogus DMCA Over Shirt Should Result in Fees (techdirt.com)
2172.
Monaspace font 1.1 released (github.com)
2173.
Writing C code in Java/Clojure: GraalVM specific programming (2021) (yyhh.org)
2174.
Large Language Models in Containers Locally with Podman AI Lab (github.com)
2175.
Haiku Activity and Contract Report, April 2024 (haiku-os.org)
2176.
2177.
The Denmark secret: how it became the most trusting country (theguardian.com)
2178.
Microwaves Not Made in China (aintfromchina.com)
2179.
Changes to iOS App Distribution Fees in the EU (developer.apple.com)
2180.
More nuclear energy means less mining (thebreakthrough.org)
2181.
Apple’s “Let Loose” iPad event was shot on iPhone with Panavision lenses (prolost.com)
2182.
What the data says about crime in the U.S. (pewresearch.org)
2183.
Starlink geofence appears to have some gaping holes (theregister.com)
2184.
What ever happened to Modula-2? (goto10retro.com)
2185.
Big Companies vs. Startups (2015) (danluu.com)
2186.
Confessions from an Unpleasant Woman (woodfromeden.substack.com)
2187.
Bluesky Is Building the Decentralized Social Media Jack Dorsey Wants (techdirt.com)
2188.
The War on Weeds (noemamag.com)
2189.
GameStop rockets, as 'Roaring Kitty' returns; shares halted (thestreet.com)
2190.
Apple's 'incredibly private' Safari is not so private in Europe (theregister.com)