November 2024 Archive
9361.
Parsing arguments in Rust with no dependencies (ntietz.com)
9362.
HTML link, or button, that is the question / Marijke Luttekes (marijkeluttekes.dev)
9363.
Why experimental variation in neuroimaging should be embraced (nature.com)
9364.
A Rock-Star Researcher Spun a Web of Lies–and Nearly Got Away with It (thewalrus.ca)
9365.
Exercise in a pill: have scientists found a drug that's as good as a 10km run? (theguardian.com)
9366.
AI's "Human in the Loop" Isn't (pluralistic.net)
9367.
Looking for Weekend Jobs? (workpt.com)
9368.
Public Dataset of Social Media Discourse about the 2024 U.S. Election (arxiv.org)
9369.
They made a public Rolodex of our faces. Here’s how I tried to get out. (washingtonpost.com)
9370.
Blood Sugar Control Is a Key Factor in Slowing Brain Aging (bgu.ac.il)
9371.
FTX's Young Executives Shattered Their Parents (nytimes.com)
9372.
Could happy relationships hold the key to less stress in aging? (medicalxpress.com)
9373.
How the occult gave birth to science (nautil.us)
9374.
Object Pools (famicom.party)
9375.
Is there a 'natural law' of evolution? (science.org)
9376.
The Best CEOs Respond (dan.bulwinkle.net)
9377.
Rqbit is a BitTorrent client written in Rust (github.com)
9378.
Why are Normal Distributions Normal? [pdf] (aidanlyon.com)
9379.
Richard A. Cash, who saved millions from dehydration, has died (nytimes.com)
9380.
Islands of the Feral Pigs (hakaimagazine.com)
9381.
Kindle Colorsoft owners complain of a yellow bar on the e-reader's screen (theverge.com)
9382.
Value Capture [pdf] (philpapers.org)
9383.
Fundamentals of a Discipline of Computer Program and Systems Design [pdf] (vtda.org)
9384.
Insurance for AI: Easier Said Than Done (loeber.substack.com)
9385.
Show HN: Simtown.ai – US Election Simulation with AI Characters (app.simtown.ai)
9386.
Principles of Dependent Type Theory [pdf] (danielgratzer.com)
9387.
What Is Window Dressing in Finance? (investopedia.com)
9388.
Predicted outputs: GPT-4o inference speed-up for editing tasks (platform.openai.com)
9389.
New memory chip controlled by light and magnets could make AI less power-hungry (livescience.com)
9390.