April 2021 Archive
16801.
Using Unix Magic Tricks for Load Balancing (thorstenball.com)
16802.
A Dead Game Clock (anarc.at)
16803.
What it means to be a science-literate citizen in a digital world (pnas.org)
16804.
Science Shows Why Simplifying Is Hard and Complicating Is Easy (bloomberg.com)
16805.
Jacques Herbrand (en.wikipedia.org)
16806.
Hester Ford, Oldest Living American, Dies at 115 (Or 116) (npr.org)
16807.
Beyond the shouting match: what is a blockchain, really? (dustycloud.org)
16808.
My letter to Xi Jinping on China's cotton problem (finance.yahoo.com)
16809.
ASCII Ray Tracing in C++ (github.com)
16810.
First GMO mosquitoes to be released in the Florida Keys (grist.org)
16811.
Microsoft Game Stack Keynote: Delivering the New Generation of Gaming Graphics (youtube.com)
16812.
Qualcomm open sources their Type-1 hypervisor called Gunyah (github.com)
16813.
Five open source software applications for virtualization (searchservervirtualization.techtarget.com)
16814.
Battery-Metal Rush Pits Miners Against Marine Biologists (bloomberg.com)
16815.
U.S. Is Under Pressure to Release Vaccine Supplies as India Faces Deadly Surge (nytimes.com)
16816.
Safe Computing in an Unsafe World: Die Zeit Interview (2015) (dankaminsky.com)
16817.
The Mother of All Accidents (nautil.us)
16818.
Secret Hitler (secrethitler.com)
16819.
How to Successfully Hand over Systems (developers.soundcloud.com)
16820.
Annotating Kubernetes Services for Humans (ambassadorlabs.github.io)
16821.
A puzzle game of password requirements (passwordfromhell.com)
16822.
Machine Learning, Ethics, and Open Source Licensing (thegradient.pub)
16823.
Asian American young adults only race group with suicide as lead cause of death (theconversation.com)
16824.
Academic freedom’s most determined adversaries are inside academia (claremontreviewofbooks.com)
16825.
Boba Shortage Could Stretch into Summer, Leave Businesses in a Bind (npr.org)
16826.
What happened during the Hong Kong 2019 “protests” (twitter.com)
16827.
YouTube is now building its own video-transcoding chips (arstechnica.com)
16828.
With 11 people on space station, astronauts get crafty with sleeping spots (space.com)
16829.
Non-Extractive Architecture: “not intrinsically dependent on exploitation” (dezeen.com)
16830.
Space Spinoffs: The Technology to Reach the Moon Was Put to Use Back on Earth (npr.org)