Yearly Favorites
7651.
Load is not what you should balance: Introducing Prequal (usenix.org)
7652.
Haskelling My Python (unnamed.website)
7653.
Vibe-Coding a PCB – surprisingly good (atomic14.substack.com)
7654.
Show HN: Telescope – an open-source web-based log viewer for logs in ClickHouse (github.com)
7655.
Learnings from building AI agents (cubic.dev)
7656.
Does the Internet Route Around Damage? – Baltic Sea Cable Cuts (labs.ripe.net)
7657.
Coolify’s rise to fame, and why it could be a big deal (blog.api-fiddle.com)
7658.
Show HN: Onit – Source-available ChatGPT Desktop with local mode, Claude, Gemini (github.com)
7659.
Dead Games (garry.net)
7660.
MARS.EXE → COM (2021) (chaos.if.uj.edu.pl)
7661.
Efficient Reasoning with Hidden Thinking (arxiv.org)
7662.
Xapian: Open source search engine library (xapian.org)
7663.
Commercials that David Lynch directed (2018) (openculture.com)
7664.
Writing my own dithering algorithm in Racket (amanvir.com)
7665.
Papersway – a scrollable window management for Sway/i3wm (spwhitton.name)
7666.
Curry: A functional logic programming language (curry-lang.org)
7667.
Moonshine, the new state of the art for speech to text (petewarden.com)
7668.
Clojure: Realtime collaborative web apps without ClojureScript (andersmurphy.com)
7669.
Reactive Relational Algebra (taylor.town)
7670.
The Night Watch [pdf] (2013) (scholar.harvard.edu)
7671.
Deno vs. Oracle: Canceling the JavaScript Trademark (deno.com)
7672.
How do archivists package things? The battle of the boxes (peelarchivesblog.com)
7673.
London Street Views (1840) (davidrumsey.com)
7674.
The Art and Mathematics of Genji-Ko (oranlooney.com)
7675.
I'm Done with Ubuntu (ounapuu.ee)
7676.
How we centralized and structured error handling in Golang (olivernguyen.io)
7677.
The origins of 60-Hz as a power frequency (1997) (ieeexplore.ieee.org)
7678.
"Slow Pay, Low Pay or No Pay": Blue Cross Approved Surgeries Then Refused to Pay (propublica.org)
7679.
The mistake of yearning for the 'friendly' online world of 20 years ago (english.elpais.com)
7680.
Most gamers prefer single-player games (midiaresearch.com)