October 2021 Archive
1861.
An Honest Look at Urbit (jayriverlong.substack.com)
1862.
The history of what we call work (thenation.com)
1863.
It's not your imagination – Microsoft's sofware has gone downhill (arstechnica.com)
1864.
Generic CRC algorithm generator, from Mark Adler (github.com)
1865.
Byte Magazine – Atari Articles (1979-1993) (archive.org)
1866.
China PCR test orders soared before first reported Covid case (asia.nikkei.com)
1867.
The Math Behind “Spot It” (smithsonianmag.com)
1868.
Before Pong, There Was Computer Space (thereader.mitpress.mit.edu)
1869.
EFF Board of Directors Votes to Remove John Gilmore from the Board (eff.org)
1870.
NetBSD is Looking for various WiFi hardware (mail-index.netbsd.org)
1871.
Reactive, DAG-based notebooks in Hex 2.0 (hex.tech)
1872.
Beyond inductive datatypes: exploring Self types (github.com)
1873.
China PCR test orders soared before first confirmed Covid case (asia.nikkei.com)
1874.
SFC files lawsuit against Vizio Inc. for GPL violations (sfconservancy.org)
1875.
First Principles of Interaction Design (2014) (asktog.com)
1876.
Ask HN: How to start learning about investments?
1877.
Too big to cover alone: Newsrooms team up (axios.com)
1878.
Ask HN: Best way to organize 100-200 emails/day in Outlook?
1879.
Windows 11: Microsoft's pointless update (computerworld.com)
1880.
Toxoplasmosis associated with entrepreneurial initiation and performance (2020) (researchgate.net)
1881.
The Facebook whistleblower is heroic and terribly wrong (mattstoller.substack.com)
1882.
Art Vote (artvote.net)
1883.
Declassified docs reveal truth about FBI’s contribution to Hemingway’s demise (history101.com)
1884.
‘When We Cease to Understand the World’ (nytimes.com)
1885.
Who scams the scammers? Meet the scambaiters (theguardian.com)
1886.
Meet The Extropians (1994) (wired.com)
1887.
A difficult case: Diagnosis made by hallucinatory voices (1997) (bmj.com)
1888.
OS/360 on Hercules: Overview (2003) (conmicro.com)
1889.
Pong using browser windows as the paddles and ball (2009) (stewd.io)
1890.
Premortems will keep your code alive (cobaltrobotics.com)