March 2025 Archive
4981.
4982.
The Staff+ Performance Cliff (sylormiller.com)
4983.
'Global weirding': climate whiplash hitting biggest cities (theguardian.com)
4984.
The OSI First to Endorse United Nations Open Source Principles (unite.un.org)
4985.
A weekend with Apple's Mac Studio with M3 Ultra: The only real AI workstation (creativestrategies.com)
4986.
The Diseases Are Coming (theatlantic.com)
4987.
BYD undercuts Tesla around the world, by the numbers (restofworld.org)
4988.
Learning physics while monitoring vibrations of the Earth with seismic phenomena (iopscience.iop.org)
4989.
Llama-VSCode (marketplace.visualstudio.com)
4990.
The difference between tokens and words (johndcook.com)
4991.
Sign in as anyone: Bypassing SAML SSO authentication with parser differentials (github.blog)
4992.
Fertility on demand (worksinprogress.co)
4993.
SUSE doubles down on AI and Multi-Linux Support to prove it's still in the game (theregister.com)
4994.
Justice Department investigating terrorism charges for pro-Palestine protesters (cnn.com)
4995.
Getting Back to the EU: From Google Cloud to Self-Hosted EU Infrastructure (pgaleone.eu)
4996.
4997.
A 6502 emulator written in busybox ash (social.treehouse.systems)
4998.
Solving GitHub Issues with Claude Code (coder.com)
4999.
Ontario and Toronto move to ban US contractors (globalconstructionreview.com)
5000.
DeepSeek has banned its employees from leaving China (firstpost.com)
5001.
Show HN: A Simple Inbox for Your Exceptions and Odd Events (wt.tools)
5002.
California's AB 412: A Bill That Could Crush Startups, Cement Big Tech Monopoly (eff.org)
5003.
When the Animals Went Electric (nautil.us)
5004.
DeepSeek smallpond, 3FS and data processing for AI (blog.getdaft.io)
5005.
5006.
Five charged in European Parliament Huawei bribery probe (reuters.com)
5007.
DOGE USDA Cuts Could Cause US Grocery Price Inflation, Invasive Species Spread (wired.com)
5008.
5009.
Trauma treatment: Playing Tetris increased hippocampal volume in PTSD patients (pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov)
5010.
'Segregated facilities' are no longer explicitly banned in federal contracts (npr.org)