August 2023 Archive
2071.
The geometry of diffusion guidance (sander.ai)
2072.
HackerOne lays off 12% of its workforce (hackerone.com)
2073.
Apple’s Employee No. 0 (2008) (electronicsweekly.com)
2074.
We Are Not Supporting OpenTF (medium.com)
2075.
Tell HN: Gmail rate limiting emails from AWS SES
2076.
Area 51 FBI Raid (2023) (area51fbiraid.com)
2077.
Cruise blames Outside Lands for driverless car traffic fiasco in San Francisco (sfchronicle.com)
2078.
The best approach I've seen for hiring junior engineers (rubick.com)
2079.
A clock where the time is in a song title (pudding.cool)
2080.
A Metaobject Protocol for C++ (1995) [pdf] (dl.acm.org)
2081.
Modernizing compiler design for Carbon's toolchain [video] (youtube.com)
2082.
Sapphire Rapids Core-to-Core Latency (jprahman.substack.com)
2083.
Secure Boot on ESP32 Platforms (thistle.tech)
2084.
Frog Galvanoscope (en.wikipedia.org)
2085.
How to share a NumPy array between processes (superfastpython.com)
2086.
The Deepest Submarine Rescue (2021) (newsweek.com)
2087.
Porting Stunt Car Racer to the Commodore Plus/4 (cobbpg.github.io)
2088.
Show HN: Gentrace – evaluation and observability for generative AI (gentrace.ai)
2089.
Backblaze Drive Stats for Q2 2023 (backblaze.com)
2090.
American workers are demanding almost $80k a year to take a new job (cnbc.com)
2091.
Polish railway system hacked, trains forced to stop by attackers (twitter.com)
2092.
ChatGPT web and mobile UIs unavailable (status.openai.com)
2093.
Just how hot was July? Hotter than anything on record (npr.org)
2094.
YouTube no longer suggests videos if your ‘watch history’ is turned off (techcrunch.com)
2095.
Hacker Smacker: Friend/foe individual writers on Hacker News (github.com)
2096.
Ramda: A practical functional library for JavaScript programmers (ramdajs.com)
2097.
Multimodal Neurons in Pretrained Text-Only Transformers (huggingface.co)
2098.
Advantages to running FreeBSD as a server operating system (klarasystems.com)
2099.
Significant slice of the U.S. workforce believes their jobs have no purpose (psypost.org)
2100.
Packaging software is something that takes work (utcc.utoronto.ca)