November 2025 Archive
631.
NixOS 25.11 released (nixos.org)
632.
Fifteen Years (xkcd.com)
633.
Linux on the Fujitsu Lifebook U729 (borretti.me)
634.
WriterdeckOS (writerdeckos.com)
635.
CS234: Reinforcement Learning Winter 2025 (web.stanford.edu)
636.
Studies increasingly find links between air pollutants and dementia (nytimes.com)
637.
Show HN: Stun LLMs with thousands of invisible Unicode characters (gibberifier.com)
638.
Cities panic over having to release mass surveillance recordings (neuburger.substack.com)
639.
Beginner-friendly, unofficial documentation for Helix text editor (helix-editor.vercel.app)
640.
Bloom filters are good for search that does not scale (notpeerreviewed.com)
641.
The Banished Bottom of the Housing Market (ryanpuzycki.com)
642.
People keep flocking to Linux, not just to escape Windows (zdnet.com)
643.
Ask HN: How are Markov chains so different from tiny LLMs?
644.
We ran over 600 image generations to compare AI image models (latenitesoft.com)
645.
The Math of Why You Can't Focus at Work (justoffbyone.com)
646.
Build a Compiler in Five Projects (kmicinski.com)
647.
Windhawk Windows classic theme mod for Windows 11 (windhawk.net)
648.
New magnetic component discovered in the Faraday effect (phys.org)
649.
A down detector for down detector's down detector (downdetectorsdowndetectorsdowndetector.com)
650.
Tech Titans Amass Multimillion-Dollar War Chests to Fight AI Regulation (wsj.com)
651.
How when AWS was down, we were not (authress.io)
652.
How Slide Rules Work (amenzwa.github.io)
653.
Study finds memory decline surge in young people (onepercentrule.substack.com)
654.
New South Korean national law will turn large parking lots into solar farms (electrek.co)
655.
Moving from OpenBSD to FreeBSD for firewalls (utcc.utoronto.ca)
656.
Angel Investors, a Field Guide (jeanyang.com)
657.
Control structures in programming languages: from goto to algebraic effects (xavierleroy.org)
658.
AMD continues to chip away at Intel's x86 market share (tomshardware.com)
659.
XBMC 4.0 for the Original Xbox (xbox-scene.info)
660.
52 Year old data tape could contain Unix history (theregister.com)