August 2022 Archive
7051.
Determining Malicious Probabilities Through ASNs (akamai.com)
7052.
Reversing Technical Interviews (linkedin.com)
7053.
What is the best ANN search solution with metadata pre-filtering?
7054.
Ubuntu 22.04.1 LTS Delayed Due to an OEM Install Issue Leading to Broken Snaps (phoronix.com)
7055.
'Social contagion' isn't driving teens to transition: study (ctvnews.ca)
7056.
The Great Regression (aeon.co)
7057.
Show HN: Game Based Interactive Learning for Maths (pledu.co)
7058.
Associate all source code files with your editor in macOS using duti (alexpeattie.com)
7059.
Surprising Mac Features That I Discovered Recently (medium.com)
7060.
The Case for Longtermism (nytimes.com)
7061.
The AI Scaling Hypothesis (lastweekin.ai)
7062.
Is Old Music Killing New Music? (theringer.com)
7063.
Raspberry Pi as wireless access point (hanki.dev)
7064.
Solar Cycle 25: Could Be Strongest Cycle Since Records Began (forbes.com)
7065.
Communication in a world of pervasive surveillance [pdf] (pure.tue.nl)
7066.
The Metaverse Is Not a Place. It’s a Communications Medium (oreilly.com)
7067.
Dum Dums Lollipops Drop-Shipping Hustle on Amazon Costs Spangler Candy Millions (bloomberg.com)
7068.
A Guile Steel smelting pot (dustycloud.org)
7069.
Ransomware Negotiator Is a Thing (theregister.com)
7070.
When the sun switches off the solar panels (techxplore.com)
7071.
Linux now has a Runtime Verification Interface merged in (git.kernel.org)
7072.
The Lessons of Xanadu (jasoncrawford.org)
7073.
Show HN: Vlly – A simple API to powerful 3D/VR/AR delivery (vlly-public.notion.site)
7074.
Apple suppliers rumored to be told to avoid Made in Taiwan label (engadget.com)
7075.
Files Transferred over Shell Protocol (en.wikipedia.org)
7076.
Moose Test (en.wikipedia.org)
7077.
Show HN: Debuglater – Serialize Python traceback for later debugging (github.com)
7078.
Crypto-driven GPU crash makes Nvidia miss Q2 projections by $1.4B (arstechnica.com)
7079.
Why Not Slow AI Progress? (astralcodexten.substack.com)
7080.
Why India’s roads are so deadly (economist.com)