Weekly Best
301.
Tesla’s autonomous driving claims might be coming to an end [video] (youtube.com)
302.
Light Sleep: Waking VMs in 200ms with eBPF and snapshots (koyeb.com)
303.
Show HN: A Map of All YC Companies (5,300 Startups by Batch and Location) (yc.foundersaround.com)
304.
Farewell to Meshnet (nordvpn.com)
305.
iNaturalist keeps full species classification models private (github.com)
306.
Show HN: Anonymous Age Verification (gist.github.com)
307.
A gentle introduction to CP/M (eerielinux.wordpress.com)
308.
Half an year on Alpine: just musl aside (blog.jutty.dev)
309.
Making the most of a dumb fax switcher box in the old days (rachelbythebay.com)
310.
Liquid Glass? That's what your M4 CPU is for (idiallo.com)
311.
Unix Conspiracy (1991) (catb.org)
312.
Should we revisit Extreme Programming in the age of AI? (hyperact.co.uk)
313.
Meschers: Geometry Processing of Impossible Objects (anadodik.github.io)
314.
They blew up a boat far offshore, killed eleven people, and called it justice (mitchthelawyer.substack.com)
315.
Lessons from building an AI data analyst (pedronasc.com)
316.
Apertus 8B and 70B – a new open multilingual LLM from Switzerland (actu.epfl.ch)
317.
Launch HN: Slashy (YC S25) – AI that connects to apps and does tasks
318.
Show HN: Amber – better Beeper, a modern all-in-one messenger (useamber.app)
319.
F-Stack – A network development kit with high performance based on DPDK (f-stack.org)
320.
Hledger 1.50 (github.com)
321.
SomaFM 25th Anniversary (somafm.com)
322.
Why Rewriting Emacs Is Hard (kyo.iroiro.party)
323.
Launch HN: Datafruit (YC S25) – AI for DevOps
324.
Wal3: A Write-Ahead Log for Chroma, Built on Object Storage (trychroma.com)
325.
Enrollment at trade schools is expected to grow (finance.yahoo.com)
326.
Zuckerberg’s AI hires disrupt Meta with swift exits and threats to leave (arstechnica.com)
327.
Rug pulls, forks, and open-source feudalism (lwn.net)
328.
A Unique, High-Tech (Family) Computer (nicole.express)
329.
eBPF 101: Your First Step into Kernel Programming (journal.hexmos.com)
330.
The company behind the Dia and Arc browsers is being acquired (theverge.com)