June 2021 Archive
5581.
Rimac Nevera Review (topgear.com)
5582.
How to Stop Living in Infinite Browsing Mode (theatlantic.com)
5583.
The Science of Bullshit (unherd.com)
5584.
A list of bad practices commonly seen in industrial projects (belaycpp.com)
5585.
The failed promise of Kenya’s smart city (restofworld.org)
5586.
NixOS 21.05 Released (nixos.org)
5587.
Tightness Driven Development in Rust (ecorax.net)
5588.
Wasm3 release v0.5.0: Multi-Values, Bulk Memory ops, Apple M1 support (github.com)
5589.
The 17 Ways to Run Containers on AWS (lastweekinaws.com)
5590.
How to Negotiate with Ransomware Hackers (newyorker.com)
5591.
Trump Administration Secretly Seized Phone Records of Times Reporters (nytimes.com)
5592.
Drastic: Amateur Sleuths Broke the Wuhan Lab Story (newsweek.com)
5593.
Behind the painstaking process of creating Chinese computer fonts (technologyreview.com)
5594.
Remote Meeting Management Tips for Engineering Leaders (codingsans.com)
5595.
Magic Online player punished for reporting too many “known” bugs (twitter.com)
5596.
Hello World of Programming with Linear Algebra (dragan.rocks)
5597.
Run Analyses Directly from Big CSVs in Julia (juliafordatascience.com)
5598.
The Open Source Insights Project (opensource.googleblog.com)
5599.
More mushrooms, lower cancer risk (pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov)
5600.
Arctic sea ice thinning twice as fast than expected, say researchers (businessinsider.in)
5601.
Biden bans US investment in 59 Chinese companies tied to surveillance, military (whitehouse.gov)
5602.
Apple updates AirTags' privacy measures (techplanet.today)
5603.
FundOSS – Democratic funding for open source projects (fundoss.org)
5604.
Justin Kan's Pitchdeck reviews (youtube.com)
5605.
TCP/IP stack written in Python
5606.
Fedora contemplates the driverless printing future (lwn.net)
5607.
China military uses AI to track rapidly increasing UFOs (scmp.com)
5608.
The SaaS CTO Security Checklist Redux (goldfiglabs.com)
5609.
SSH Agent Forwarding considered harmful (2015) (heipei.github.io)
5610.
Analysis reveals global ‘hot spots’ where new coronaviruses may emerge (news.berkeley.edu)