March 2023 Archive
991.
A Bank of One's Own (nayafia.substack.com)
992.
Flow-Based Programming, a way for AI and humans to develop together (bergie.iki.fi)
993.
Autodoc: Toolkit for auto-generating codebase documentation using LLMs (github.com)
994.
Graduate students at the University of Southern California have won a union (jacobin.com)
995.
Launch HN: Helicone.ai (YC W23) – Open-source logging for OpenAI
996.
The Dogs of Chernobyl (science.org)
997.
Low-Level C Programming – CSE 325 Lecture Videos (youtube.com)
998.
Tailwind CSS v3.3 (tailwindcss.com)
999.
5M item limit for Google Drive: File unable to generate or upload due to 403 (issuetracker.google.com)
1000.
Show HN: Construct Animate – our new browser-based animation tool (construct.net)
1001.
Box64 – Linux Userspace x86_64 Emulator Targeted at ARM64 Linux Devices (github.com)
1002.
Show HN: Terminal Based Wikipedia (github.com)
1003.
Domain Names as Handles in Bluesky (blueskyweb.xyz)
1004.
YouTube millionaires are not your friends (vox.com)
1005.
SheepShaver: macOS run-time environment for BeOS and Linux (sheepshaver.cebix.net)
1006.
Even the Pylint codebase uses Ruff (github.com)
1007.
Quicker serverless Postgres connections (neon.tech)
1008.
Belgium launches nationwide safe harbor for ethical hackers (portswigger.net)
1009.
AI Won't Cause Unemployment (pmarca.substack.com)
1010.
Word-processor idiot (Japanese expression) (en.wiktionary.org)
1011.
Freedom Clock (domsson.github.io)
1012.
Getting Past “Ampersand-Driven Development” in Rust (fiberplane.com)
1013.
Steel Threads are a powerful but obscure software design approach (rubick.com)
1014.
Starlink V2 Satellites in Trouble (twitter.com)
1015.
Gambas Almost Means BASIC (gambas.sourceforge.net)
1016.
Italian data protection authority clamps down ChatGPT (garanteprivacy.it)
1017.
Ask HN: V2 – Laid off folks, are you getting hired yet?
1018.
Will AIs take all our jobs and end human history? It’s complicated (writings.stephenwolfram.com)
1019.
Rolling Stone left out the reason why FBI raided journalist's home (npr.org)
1020.
Continuous growth is cancer (christianheilmann.com)