March 2023 Archive
1231.
Show HN: Lunette – A word processor designed around writing, not formatting (lunette.app)
1232.
Porn Zoom bomb forces cancellation of Fed's Waller event (reuters.com)
1233.
Orange Pi 5 Is a Great and Fast Alternative to the Raspberry Pi 4 (phoronix.com)
1234.
Low Cost CO2 Sensors Comparison: Photo-Acoustic vs. NDIR (airgradient.com)
1235.
Knots smaller than human hair make materials unusually tough (caltech.edu)
1236.
The wet bird (2000) (oyonale.com)
1237.
Rethinking splice() (lwn.net)
1238.
Who reads your email? (netmeister.org)
1239.
SSD as Long Term Storage Testing (htwingnut.com)
1240.
Daniel Stenberg and the home of curl in Stockholm, Sweden (hackerstations.com)
1241.
Tufte CSS (edwardtufte.github.io)
1242.
Digital Public Library of America (dp.la)
1243.
Ratatui: tui-rs revival project (github.com)
1244.
Physical Knobs and Elixir (underjord.io)
1245.
Big Banks Agree to Historic $30B Deposit Injection in First Republic (citigroup.com)
1246.
Georgia nuclear plant begins splitting atoms (apnews.com)
1247.
I played chess against ChatGPT-4 and lost (villekuosmanen.medium.com)
1248.
Ahrefs saved $400m in 3 years by not going to the cloud (tech.ahrefs.com)
1249.
YouTube TV raises subscription to $72.99, inching closer to cable pricing (theverge.com)
1250.
The venture capitalist's dilemma (newsletter.mollywhite.net)
1251.
Two U.S. men charged in 2022 hacking of DEA portal (krebsonsecurity.com)
1252.
BeaglePlay from BeagleBoard brings fun to building with computers (beagleboard.org)
1253.
A mirror that reverses how light travels in time (spectrum.ieee.org)
1254.
The Coffeeshop Fallacy (2011) (web.archive.org)
1255.
A replicable decline in mood during rest and simple tasks (nature.com)
1256.
a[low:high:max] in Golang – A Rare Slice Trick (build-your-own.org)
1257.
Dropping support for old C++ standards (lists.boost.org)
1258.
Bacteria hijack a meningeal neuroimmune axis to facilitate brain invasion (nature.com)
1259.
SVB's programmatic payment systems are back online
1260.
Where did FTX customer money go? Firm says Bankman-Fried took $2.2B (arstechnica.com)