October 2025 Archive
10471.
Looking for Work and Community Resources
10472.
Where's the AI Design Renaissance? (learnui.design)
10473.
Memantine (en.wikipedia.org)
10474.
Apple ups the reward for finding major exploits to $2M (wired.com)
10475.
The Resurrection of the Two-State Solution (foreignaffairs.com)
10476.
Algorithmic Censorship Changes the Way We Talk (reason.com)
10477.
The hot new trend in marketing: hating on AI (businessinsider.com)
10478.
Google blurs the line between sponsored and results (theverge.com)
10479.
The problem is humans 'can't stand each other' (fortune.com)
10480.
Lockheed Martin unveils new Black Hawk cargo drone platform (ukdefencejournal.org.uk)
10481.
Turkish "ı" and "ş" bug creates design problem across many fonts?
10482.
Ask HN: Did the best tab change on HN?
10483.
When must we lobotomize ourselves? (kenonical.substack.com)
10484.
A quick look at Apple's container runtime in macOS Tahoe (shipit.peterhollmer.com)
10485.
Why Signal's post-quantum makeover is an engineering achievement (arstechnica.com)
10486.
Canada Express Entry Statistics (dailistats.netlify.app)
10487.
Vite+ – Voidzero (voidzero.dev)
10488.
Zawinski's Law was Never About Email (danverbraganza.com)
10489.
Troubling: AI's self-investment spree sets off bubble alarms on Wall Street (finance.yahoo.com)
10490.
Abstracted Social Media (lab.shinadayu.com)
10491.
"Snarky"; "Snark" (notoneoffbritishisms.com)
10492.
We're all going to be paying AI's Godzilla-sized power bills (theregister.com)
10493.
Cherri: A development environment for Apple Shortcuts (cherrilang.org)
10494.
Jamie Dimon: Our Investments for National Security (wsj.com)
10495.
Beyond Meat Debt Deal Rattles Investors (wsj.com)
10496.
Memantine Boosts Social Functioning in Some Autism Cases (medscape.com)
10497.
Have we been measuring mountains all wrong? (nationalgeographic.com)
10498.
Sxwm v1.7 Release (github.com)
10499.
Ask HN: What does your project research and planning process look like?
10500.
Ubuntu 25.10 lands: Rustier and Wayland-ier, but Flatpak is broken (theregister.com)