October 2020 Archive
1951.
Invites sent for Starlink beta (old.reddit.com)
1952.
How Scrabble Blew Its Big Moment (si.com)
1953.
PORTL Hologram raises $3M to put a hologram machine in every home (techcrunch.com)
1954.
How to Type 3x Faster (barehands.substack.com)
1955.
Show HN: I co-wrote a novel with GPT-3 in 118 hours (docs.google.com)
1956.
Four submerged villages found in Noordoostpolder (nltimes.nl)
1957.
Slaughterbots (youtube.com)
1958.
Covering a cover-up in real time (axios.com)
1959.
TwitGrid – A simple, broadsheet layout for reading Twitter feeds (github.com)
1960.
You Don’t Need a Blockchain, You Need a Time-Series Database (thenewstack.io)
1961.
LIL: Little Interpreted Language (runtimeterror.com)
1962.
Farther Away: “Robinson Crusoe,” David Foster Wallace, and Solitude (2011) (newyorker.com)
1963.
Jailbreaking your Intel CPU may not be as far away as you think (arstechnica.com)
1964.
Announcing NetBSD 9.1 (netbsd.org)
1965.
Ask HN: Freelancer? Seeking freelancer? (October 2020)
1966.
Deaths due to Covid-19 compared with deaths from influenza and pneumonia (ons.gov.uk)
1967.
Plausible Analytics Isn't GDPR Compliant (blog.paranoidpenguin.net)
1968.
WhatWG: Proposal – Update XPath to at least v2.0 (github.com)
1969.
Windsor Castle: Changing hundreds of royal clocks (bbc.co.uk)
1970.
Why I bought a voting machine on eBay (bbc.com)
1971.
Strict APIs vs. Forgiving APIs (publicobject.com)
1972.
Fact Checks and Context for Wayback Machine Pages (blog.archive.org)
1973.
Show HN: Canonic: A low-code platform to build APIs in minutes (canonic.dev)
1974.
Google Meet Security and Privacy for users (support.google.com)
1975.
Apple Officially Obsoletes Last iPod Nano Model (macrumors.com)
1976.
Founder Paydays at Exit (IPO) (blossomstreetventures.medium.com)
1977.
Something Awful, a Cornerstone of Internet Culture, Is Under New Ownership (vice.com)
1978.
A Tree That Owns Itself (2018) (thetreeographer.com)
1979.
The Key Points of Working Effectively with Legacy Code (understandlegacycode.com)
1980.
A deeply flawed lawsuit that would do nothing to help consumers (blog.google)