December 2020 Archive
511.
V (Vlang) 0.2 (github.com)
512.
California plan for wealth tax on anyone who spends 60 days a year in the state (wsj.com)
513.
The Future of Clojure (thoughtworks.com)
514.
Pfizer-Biontech vaccine data stolen in cyber attack (reuters.com)
515.
Against Essential and Accidental Complexity (danluu.com)
516.
App privacy labels now live on the App Store (developer.apple.com)
517.
Kaitai: Describe the structure of data, not how you read or write it (kaitai.io)
518.
Law Enforcement Is Accessing Locked Devices (lawfareblog.com)
519.
Google suggest vi for Emacs and Emacs for vi (google.com)
520.
FAA issuing new rules to allow drones to fly over people and at night (reuters.com)
521.
What does privacy mean under surveillance capitalism? (lithub.com)
522.
How Shopify Uses WebAssembly Outside of the Browser (shopify.engineering)
523.
Fable 3: F# to JavaScript compiler (fable.io)
524.
SwiftUI tutorials rewritten completely (developer.apple.com)
525.
Introduction to Reinforcement Learning (2015) (deepmind.com)
526.
The impact of Apple Silicon Macs on Broadway (brianli.com)
527.
French watchdog fines Google, Amazon for breaching cookies rules (fr.reuters.com)
528.
Rust 1.49.0 (blog.rust-lang.org)
529.
Emotional headlines have an impact regardless of the credibility of the source (hu-berlin.de)
530.
The Design of the Roland Juno Syntheziser's Oscillators (blog.thea.codes)
531.
Show HN: Owncast – An open-source, self-hosted live streaming server
532.
How Video Works (howvideo.works)
533.
New coronavirus variant: What do we know? (bbc.com)
534.
Magician-turned-mathematician uncovers bias in coin flipping (2004) (news.stanford.edu)
535.
Planner 2.6 – An open-source Todoist alternative for Linux (useplanner.com)
536.
ORC – Nim's new memory managment (nim-lang.org)
537.
UK and EU agree Brexit trade deal (theguardian.com)
538.
Should There Be Limits on Persuasive Technologies? (schneier.com)
539.
Electric Monarch tractor can plow a field without a driver and run for ten hours (thedrive.com)
540.
Show HN: Pop.com – Video Calls, in 3D (pop.com)