August 2022 Archive
7561.
Bitcoin censorship will most likely come, pt 2 (2020) (juraj.bednar.io)
7562.
Motherhood brings the most dramatic brain changes of a woman’s life (bostonglobe.com)
7563.
VisiData – Universal Data TUI (Console Interview) (console.substack.com)
7564.
I made a scented tree move (old.reddit.com)
7565.
Scanning I2C Addresses (gms.tf)
7566.
How to Have Fun in Terminal: Cool Linux Commands (nixsanctuary.com)
7567.
Don't try this at home: overclocking RP2040 to 1GHz (raspberrypi.com)
7568.
The Sound of the Black Hole (twitter.com)
7569.
Zero-Copy Apache Arrow with WebAssembly (observablehq.com)
7570.
New model for predicting belief change (phys.org)
7571.
JavaScript Framework Benchmarks (krausest.github.io)
7572.
The Deadliest Road in America (vox.com)
7573.
Company wants to create artificial embryos and use organs for transplants (businessinsider.com)
7574.
Chinese censors change ending of latest 'Minions' movie (cnn.com)
7575.
Nocash “I am homeless in Hamburg – please help me out” (problemkaputt.de)
7576.
Mary Kenneth Keller – First Person to Receive Computer Science PhD in US (en.wikipedia.org)
7577.
GraphQL: For When REST Is Just Too Slow (thenewstack.io)
7578.
Is Tripp Lite Malware Now? (propublica.org)
7579.
Elon Musk Subpoenas Former Twitter CEO in Legal Battle over $44B Deal (cnet.com)
7580.
YouTube’s Fake Views Economy (theoutline.com)
7581.
Delta chat: A messaging app that works over email (delta.chat)
7582.
Swift Sucks (github.com)
7583.
Chinese GPU claiming to be faster than Nvidia A100 (wccftech.com)
7584.
The scramble for Africa's data is taking place on the cloud (qz.com)
7585.
Sony says the Playstation VR2 is coming in early 2023 (theverge.com)
7586.
Search PDF text, tables, images with Python and CLIP (colab.research.google.com)
7587.
What Drives Galaxies? The Milky Way’s Black Hole May Be the Key (quantamagazine.org)
7588.
Your Doppelgänger Is Out There and You Probably Share DNA with Them (nytimes.com)
7589.
A ChromeOS remote memory corruption vulnerability (microsoft.com)
7590.
Fed up with poor broadband, he started his own fiber internet service provider (npr.org)