April 2023 Archive
6121.
Haskell in Production: Meta (serokell.io)
6122.
ChatGPT Plays Mornington Crescent (social.mailpace.com)
6123.
Bill Gates Rejects ‘Pause’ on AI, Suggesting It’s Impractical (forbes.com)
6124.
Drone-on-Drone Combat in Ukraine Marks a New Era of Aerial Warfare (scientificamerican.com)
6125.
Show HN: Search engine for your personalized network of high-quality websites (grep.help)
6126.
Ten software engineering lessons from scaling startups from 20 to 100 people (medium.com)
6127.
Make Git Better with FZF (fortes.com)
6128.
6129.
The Leaning Tower of Progress (hedgehogreview.com)
6130.
Samsung and AMD Renew GPU Architecture Licensing Agreement: More RDNA Exynos (anandtech.com)
6131.
What I Learned by Relearning HTML (dannyguo.com)
6132.
Window: Use your own AI models on the web (github.com)
6133.
Slint 1.0 – a new cross-platform GUI toolkit coded in Rust (devclass.com)
6134.
What developers need to know about generative AI (github.blog)
6135.
Substack founders fire back at Twitter (theverge.com)
6136.
Why is the Python installation process such a mess? (bitecode.substack.com)
6137.
Phone Link relays your personal data through Microsoft servers (ctrl.blog)
6138.
How Rural America Steals Girls’ Futures (theatlantic.com)
6139.
A Weight Loss Specialist Explains the Ozempic Craze (vice.com)
6140.
Stability AI is on shaky ground (semafor.com)
6141.
Former San Francisco fire commissioner attacked with crowbar (nypost.com)
6142.
Twitter appears to be going to war with Substack (mashable.com)
6143.
Modular Errors in Rust (sabrinajewson.org)
6144.
Show HN: AI ChatBot to Facilitate Self-Help for Long Covid (wellnessxyz.com)
6145.
A Few Thoughts on Depression (noahpinion.substack.com)
6146.
China spent $240B on belt and road bailouts from 2008 to 2021, study finds (theguardian.com)
6147.
Cyberwarfare leaks show Russian army is adopting mindset of secret police (theguardian.com)
6148.
Study: ChatGPT outperforms MTurk by 3x at 1/20th of the cost (artisana.ai)
6149.
One-Night Stand Syndrome (vice.com)
6150.
Bob Lee killing shows why perception of crime matters, often conflicts with data (sfchronicle.com)