March 2025 Archive
61.
Why fastDOOM is fast (fabiensanglard.net)
62.
Honey has now lost 4M Chrome users after shady tactics were revealed (9to5google.com)
63.
We hacked Gemini's Python sandbox and leaked its source code (at least some) (landh.tech)
64.
Apple takes UK to court over 'backdoor' order (theregister.com)
65.
Age Verification Laws: A Backdoor to Surveillance (eff.org)
66.
OpenAI Audio Models (openai.fm)
67.
I asked police to send me their public surveillance footage of my car (cardinalnews.org)
68.
Cursor told me I should learn coding instead of asking it to generate it (forum.cursor.com)
69.
Stop syncing everything (sqlsync.dev)
70.
The Startup CTO's Handbook (github.com)
71.
How to Use Em Dashes (–), En Dashes (–), and Hyphens (-) (merriam-webster.com)
72.
Coordinating the Superbowl's visual fidelity with Elixir (elixir-lang.org)
73.
RubyLLM: A delightful Ruby way to work with AI (github.com)
74.
The demoscene as a UNESCO heritage in Sweden (goto80.com)
75.
Oracle attempt to hide cybersecurity incident from customers? (doublepulsar.com)
76.
The US stops sharing air quality data from embassies worldwide (apnews.com)
77.
German parliament votes as a Git contribution graph (abstimmung.eu)
78.
Made a scroll bar buddy that walks down the page when you scroll (focusfurnace.com)
79.
The Guardian flourishes without a paywall (nymag.com)
80.
I tried making artificial sunlight at home (victorpoughon.fr)
81.
Executive wealth as a factor in return-to-office (twitter.com)
82.
“Normal” engineers are the key to great teams (spectrum.ieee.org)
83.
How fast the days are getting longer (2023) (joe-antognini.github.io)
84.
Volkswagen reintroducing physical controls for vital functions (autocar.co.uk)
85.
Turkish university annuls Erdogan rival's degree, preventing run for president (reuters.com)
86.
Google to buy Wiz for $32B (reuters.com)
87.
Performance of the Python 3.14 tail-call interpreter (blog.nelhage.com)
88.
Peer-to-peer file transfers in the browser (github.com)
89.
AI tools are spotting errors in research papers (nature.com)
90.
How to write blog posts that developers read (refactoringenglish.com)