March 2023 Archive
2971.
Rising seas will cut off many properties before they’re flooded (arstechnica.com)
2972.
On Taking Photographs (oldtowneast.openpluto.com)
2973.
Apple to limit USB-C charging and data speeds for cables without MFI: Leak (forbes.com)
2974.
ChatGPT Opened a New Era in Search. Microsoft Could Ruin It (wired.com)
2975.
Social Media Influencer Charged with Election Interference (justice.gov)
2976.
Company hits small SaaS with $3250 chargeback because they “forgot to cancel” (twitter.com)
2977.
Docker’s Bad Week (infoworld.com)
2978.
Linus Tech Tips – My Channel Was Deleted Last Night (youtube.com)
2979.
OpenAI is leading a $23.5M investment in 1X, a human-like robot startup (wired.com)
2980.
The 72-hour scramble to save the United States from a banking crisis (washingtonpost.com)
2981.
CO2 certificates: Greenwashing in the African savannah (German) (zeit.de)
2982.
Data helped build ChatGPT. Where's your payout? (theatlantic.com)
2983.
Twitter will charge users to be able to vote in polls (twitter.com)
2984.
Debugging Architects (architectelevator.com)
2985.
Show HN: i2forge – A Platform for Verified Reasoning (i2forge.com)
2986.
Optimized Rust is Still Slower Than Python+NumPy (github.com)
2987.
Bitwarden flaw can let hackers steal passwords using iframes (bleepingcomputer.com)
2988.
India cuts internet for 27M people amid search for fugitive (washingtonpost.com)
2989.
Google denies destroying 'chat' evidence in U.S. antitrust lawsuit (reuters.com)
2990.
Radio Man, Autograph King (nytimes.com)
2991.
Ben Denzer, 2011–Present (2011-present.bendenzer.com)
2992.
Can a ‘fingerprint’ of your brain help predict disorders? (smithsonianmag.com)
2993.
The Implications of ChatGPT’s API Cost (old.reddit.com)
2994.
EU watchdog: Online child abuse draft law creates ‘illusion of legality’ (euractiv.com)
2995.
Backblaze 2022 SSD Drive Stats (backblaze.com)
2996.
Wine 8.3 (winehq.org)
2997.
Stop Using LastPass After New Hack Method Update (forbes.com)
2998.
Hobbyist builds ChatGPT client for MS-DOS running on a 4.77 MHz IBM PC from 1981 (arstechnica.com)
2999.
The audiences and authors of midwifery manuals (laphamsquarterly.org)
3000.
Mathematician James Glimm may have solved the Poincare Conjecture (palladiummag.com)