July 2025 Archive
11761.
Bedroom Design Orientation and Sleep Electroencephalography Signals (2019) (lww.com)
11762.
I Lowered the CO2 in My House (christian.gen.co)
11763.
The Making of Total Annihilation (pcgamer.com)
11764.
Are We Star Trek Yet? (arewetrekyet.com)
11765.
Call on Sequoia Capital to Denounce VC Shaun Maguire's Mamdani Comments (cnbc.com)
11766.
A Crumby Deal (hughhowey.com)
11767.
Back end For Front end Authentication (fusionauth.io)
11768.
Anthropic and OpenAI Have Begun the Subprime AI Crisis (wheresyoured.at)
11769.
Samsung and Epic Games call a truce in app store lawsuit (arstechnica.com)
11770.
Real-time Image-based Lighting of Glints (arxiv.org)
11771.
The Sad State of Hardware Virtual Textures (hal.science)
11772.
Marking It Up (and Down) (byk.im)
11773.
Estimadle (estimadle.com)
11774.
Show HN: Shadcn Theme Generator (shadcnstudio.com)
11775.
OpenAI and Microsoft Bankroll New A.I. Training for Teachers (nytimes.com)
11776.
The Discovery of Slowness (en.wikipedia.org)
11777.
How SpaceX satellites interfere with astronomers' view of space (muskwatch.com)
11778.
Oldest wooden tools in East Asia may have come from any of three species (arstechnica.com)
11779.
Apple Acquires Digital Avatar Company TrueMeeting to Bolster Vision Pro Personas (roadtovr.com)
11780.
AI-Enabled Coups: How a Small Group Could Use AI to Seize Power (forethought.org)
11781.
'There's a knife at my throat'. A tax code time bomb hammered small businesses (qz.com)
11782.
Show HN: I built tinyORM, a minimal, database-agnostic TypeScript ORM (github.com)
11783.
'Village of one kidney': India-Bangladesh organ traffickers rob poor donors (aljazeera.com)
11784.
Two Weeks of Wayback (ariadne.space)
11785.
Semiconductor industry could short out as copper runs dry (theregister.com)
11786.
The Small Data Showdown '25: Is It Time to Ditch Spark Yet? (milescole.dev)
11787.
Packaging a Haskell Library as a Swift Binary XCFramework (alt-romes.github.io)
11788.
Show HN: Do pushups to use your phone (timm.so)
11789.
We have floods here all the time (reddit.com)
11790.
All Programming Languages Are Fast (orgpad.info)