April 2023 Archive
4801.
WebGPT (twitter.com)
4802.
Linux Foundation Announces Launch of TLA+ Foundation (linuxfoundation.org)
4803.
Stack Overflow Joins Twitter, Reddit in Charging AI Companies for Training Data (gizmodo.com)
4804.
Show HN: Discover 1400+ AI Tools with AI Infinity Tools Directory (aiinfinity-meetpatel.notion.site)
4805.
Using Nix with Dockerfiles (mitchellh.com)
4806.
Russians can now be served conscription papers online (themoscowtimes.com)
4807.
Show HN: I made PromptWatch – LangChain tracing on steroids (promptwatch.io)
4808.
LaTeX Wine Stains (overleaf.com)
4809.
Dietary magnesium intake is related to larger brain volumes (link.springer.com)
4810.
The Students who stole the Stone of Destiny (bbc.co.uk)
4811.
Show HN: ParallelGPT – Batch processing with ChatGPT on low-code spreadsheet UI (parallelgpt.ai)
4812.
Painting a new pantheon: portrait series honours Black radicals (theguardian.com)
4813.
4814.
Statement from the listed authors of Stochastic Parrots on the “AI pause” letter (dair-institute.org)
4815.
The Hindsight Game (blog.aaronkharris.com)
4816.
A Survey of Large Language Models (arxiv.org)
4817.
Musk loses in court, has to delete tweet threatening workers who join union (arstechnica.com)
4818.
4819.
Benchmarking AI productivity gains against smartphones, PC's, and the internet (ryanshannon.substack.com)
4820.
Show HN: Deno SaaSKit (deno.com)
4821.
Tesla Light Show XLights (github.com)
4822.
Retrobright (en.wikipedia.org)
4823.
Cash App Founder Bob Lee Fatally Stabbed in San Francisco (foxnews.com)
4824.
Bob Lee, creator of Cash App and former CTO of Square, stabbed to death (techcrunch.com)
4825.
Defaults on Commercial Real Estate Loans Surge to 14-Year High (investopedia.com)
4826.
Holon (en.wikipedia.org)
4827.
Twitter is no longer policing Russian and Chinese state-backed media (semafor.com)
4828.
Another job lost to AI: ‘The human factor may soon disappear’ (english.elpais.com)
4829.
The hardware we need for our cloud exit has arrived (world.hey.com)
4830.
India to require Facebook and Twitter rely on gov’t fact checking (techcrunch.com)