January 2022 Archive
2701.
Wanna buy a radio station? (2015) (darrylparks.com)
2702.
Ask HN: Are System Design documents out of fashion?
2703.
How Slow Is Select *? (vettabase.com)
2704.
Terraform Scripting Concepts (serdigital64.github.io)
2705.
A Robocar Specialist Gives Tesla ‘Full Self-Drive’ an ‘F’ (forbes.com)
2706.
Online archives where scientists post research spark information revolution (washingtonpost.com)
2707.
A pure C Mjpeg-over-HTTP server (github.com)
2708.
An Unreliable Datagram Extension to QUIC (quicwg.org)
2709.
Former Valve economist speaks on Techno-Feudalism (the-crypto-syllabus.com)
2710.
The collapse of 1284 at Beauvais Cathedral [pdf] (cultus.hk)
2711.
Recurrences converging to the wrong limit in finite precision (2020) [pdf] (etna.math.kent.edu)
2712.
Fuck That Gator (2017) (buzzfeed.com)
2713.
The Flower of Battle: Italian Fighting Manual (1410) (publicdomainreview.org)
2714.
Show HN: A beautiful blog theme with only two requests and less 10KB transfered (github.com)
2715.
The Hong Kongers Fleeing to Blackpool (economist.com)
2716.
The Bogdanoff Affair (2010) (math.ucr.edu)
2717.
Why Pipedream? (dylanjpierce.com)
2718.
Switchable Telescopic Contact Lens (2013) (osapublishing.org)
2719.
Show HN: Wordle Image Maker (wordle.gary.mcad.am)
2720.
Node.js is finally going to get the fetch API (github.com)
2721.
Where did colors in movies and TV go? (vox.com)
2722.
Scaleway launches Elastic Metal: Bare Metal servers meet the public cloud (scaleway.com)
2723.
Show HN: SlateJS(rich text editor) Svelte view layer (nathanfaucett.github.io)
2724.
Show HN: A powerful bitstream library for TypeScript (github.com)
2725.
WiGLE – collected wireless hotspots around the world (wigle.net)
2726.
An apartment balcony became one of Italy’s best-known stages (atlasobscura.com)
2727.
TuringPi's funds have been frozen by PayPal for almost a year (twitter.com)
2728.
Different Type of Mental Models (fs.blog)
2729.
End-to-end encryption protects children, says UK information watchdog (theguardian.com)
2730.
FTC has a “plausible claim” that Facebook is an illegal monopoly, judge says (arstechnica.com)