Monthly Highlights
1411.
Generate QR Codes with Pure SQL in PostgreSQL (tanelpoder.com)
1412.
How Hackers Are Fighting Back Against ICE (eff.org)
1413.
Steve wants us to make the Macintosh boot faster (folklore.org)
1414.
Ask HN: What did you find out or explore today?
1415.
Judge to Texas: You Can't Age-Gate the Internet Without Evidence (techdirt.com)
1416.
Presidential Immunity in the United States (en.wikipedia.org)
1417.
The dawn of a world simulator (odyssey.ml)
1418.
Google: Don't make "bite-sized" content for LLMs (arstechnica.com)
1419.
PyPI in 2025: A Year in Review (blog.pypi.org)
1420.
'Three norths' alignment about to end (spatialsource.com.au)
1421.
Observability's past, present, and future (blog.sherwoodcallaway.com)
1422.
Linux computer designed with AI boots on first attempt (tomshardware.com)
1423.
Mitsubishi Diatone D-160 (1985) (audio-database.com)
1424.
The next-gen mainboard designed with amigaos4 and morphos in mind (mirari.vitasys.nl)
1425.
Show HN: Autograd.c – A tiny ML framework built from scratch (github.com)
1426.
Show HN: A geofence-based social network app 6 years in development (localvideoapp.com)
1427.
Go Gray, Not Cray: Why You Should Grayscale Your Phone (sami.eljabali.org)
1428.
Distributed Denial of Secrets (ddosecrets.com)
1429.
Loss of moist broadleaf forest in Africa has turned a carbon sink into source (nature.com)
1430.
Formal methods only solve half my problems (brooker.co.za)
1431.
Sandbox: Run untrusted AI code safely, fast (github.com)
1432.
Extensibility: The "100% Lisp" Fallacy (kyo.iroiro.party)
1433.
Washington National Opera Is Leaving the Kennedy Center (nytimes.com)
1434.
Slaughtering Competition Problems with Quantifier Elimination (2021) (grossack.site)
1435.
How to Be Less Awkward (experimental-history.com)
1436.
An Honest Review of Go (2025) (benraz.dev)
1437.
The Target forensics lab (2024) (thehorizonsun.com)
1438.
Iran's internet shutdown is chillingly precise and may last some time (theguardian.com)
1439.
Groq investor sounds alarm on data centers (axios.com)
1440.
VRChat: “There are more Japanese creators than all other countries combined” (twitter.com)