September 2021 Archive
8761.
In This House We Believe Family Trumps Politics – By Suzy Weiss (bariweiss.substack.com)
8762.
How do fintech cash flows work? (finleycms.com)
8763.
Code Explanations (blog.replit.com)
8764.
Maximal Entropy Random Walk (en.wikipedia.org)
8765.
Namecheap Is Down (namecheap.com)
8766.
Major BTC exchanges blocked in China (twitter.com)
8767.
Netflix buys first video game studio, rolls out mobile games (straitstimes.com)
8768.
The Mechanical Basis of Memory – The MeshCODE Theory (frontiersin.org)
8769.
Context Switching: Why It's So Hard to Avoid and How to Prevent It Anyway (blog.doist.com)
8770.
The talent war will not be won on compensation (peoplematters.in)
8771.
Rejection of free will leads to more compassion (factsofadrunkenman.com)
8772.
Race to the bottom: The disastrous, blindfolded rush to mine the deep sea (theguardian.com)
8773.
A Smalltalk and REBOL inspired language implemented as an AST interpreter in Nim (github.com)
8774.
Flettner Rotor (en.wikipedia.org)
8775.
History of how Toronto got a truck smashing through a wall at 299 Queen St. West (blogto.com)
8776.
Ask HN: What happens in your social bubble that is not visible from the outside?
8777.
Show HN: Fast UI Builder for GraphQL APIs (dronahq.com)
8778.
Apple says the iPad mini's 'jelly scrolling' problem is normal (engadget.com)
8779.
Stack Overflow – The Copy Paste Keyboard (drop.com)
8780.
British army to start driving tankers as queues for fuel continue (reuters.com)
8781.
Association Rule Learning (en.wikipedia.org)
8782.
A 23.7M dollar Ethereum transaction fee post mortem (blog.deversifi.com)
8783.
The XMPP Standards Foundation as a Fiscal Host (xmpp.org)
8784.
Someone is developing an NES version of Street Fighter 2 and it looks incredible (eventhubs.com)
8785.
Rocket: A Web Framework for Rust (tech.marksblogg.com)
8786.
Partoo Migrates from MongoDB to PostgreSQL (medium.com)
8787.
Don't fire staff for making mistakes (bbc.com)
8788.
Apple could hit a $3T market cap in 2022 (trendswide.com)
8789.
Brownian Model of Financial Markets (en.wikipedia.org)
8790.
What a U.S. Debt Default Would Look Like (nytimes.com)