December 2022 Archive
15931.
The 'mad' prince behind an attempt to overthrow the German state (france24.com)
15932.
Amazon Wants to Kill the Barcode (cnet.com)
15933.
Types in Ruby 3: New Features Explained (2021) (scoutapm.com)
15934.
Forking AngelList (angellist.com)
15935.
Meta is scheming to replace Twitter (mashable.com)
15936.
Their Scientific Significance Is Hard to Overstate (qualiacomputing.com)
15937.
Intel Roadmap Leaks: Raptor Lake Refresh, HEDT Replacement in 2023 (tomshardware.com)
15938.
Why vaccine hesitancy persists in China – and what they're doing about it (text.npr.org)
15939.
Covid-Bit: Keep a Distance of (At Least) 2M from My Air-Gap Computer (arxiv.org)
15940.
Coffee Compound Makes Semiconductors More Productive, Too (tomshardware.com)
15941.
Uber Sues NYC Taxi Commission to Block Rate Hike for Drivers (bloomberg.com)
15942.
15943.
Supabase Beta November 2022 (supabase.com)
15944.
Workers Have High Hopes for Pay Hikes Next Year. Perhaps Too High (bloomberg.com)
15945.
Interchain (else.how)
15946.
Find Yourself Gaslighted at Work? (marketwatch.com)
15947.
IISc partners with CELLiNK, launches centre of excellence for 3D bioprinting (economictimes.indiatimes.com)
15948.
Torrent Client in Rust (github.com)
15949.
A Historian: James Baillie on Digital Humanities and the Medieval Caucasus (acoup.blog)
15950.
The Right to Post (theatlantic.com)
15951.
Petabit-per-second data transmission using a chip-scale microcomb ring resonator (nature.com)
15952.
Some retail store credit cards now carry APRs of more than 30% (cnn.com)
15953.
Tumult analytics: Open source differential privacy library (tmlt.io)
15954.
Speed in a World of Latency (blog.generaltask.com)
15955.
1960 New York mid-air collision (admiralcloudberg.medium.com)
15956.
Business email attacks are going increasingly mobile (techradar.com)
15957.
Coming up to speed: how to learn a new domain (graphthinking.blogspot.com)
15958.
Diffusion Art or Digital Forgery? Investigating Data Replication in Diffusion (arxiv.org)
15959.
rsnapshot (rsnapshot.org)
15960.
Is floating point math broken? (stackoverflow.com)