January 2022 Archive
391.
Ask HN: Who wants to help promote RSS?
392.
International Linguistics Olympiad – Sample Problems (ioling.org)
393.
Show HN: I'm 15 and building a live quiz app for classrooms: Quickz (quickz.org)
394.
Postgres Indexes for Newbies (blog.crunchydata.com)
395.
Djokovic's PCR test was manipulated? (twitter.com)
396.
The WebSocket Handbook (ably.com)
397.
PHP in 2022 (stitcher.io)
398.
The Banality of Genius: Notes on Peter Jackson's Get Back (ianleslie.substack.com)
399.
Amazon activist’s firing deemed illegal by labor board officials (bloomberg.com)
400.
Ask HN: Why do new browsers use Chromium instead of Firefox as their base?
401.
Police in tiny Alabama town suck drivers into legal ‘black hole’ (al.com)
402.
American Airlines and The Points Guy are suing each other (viewfromthewing.com)
403.
My 70 year old mother has been using Linux on the desktop for the past 21 years (unixsheikh.com)
404.
The Charles Mingus CAT-alog (1972) (charlesmingus.com)
405.
A high-dimensional sphere spilling out of a high-dimensional cube (stanislavfort.github.io)
406.
It takes $420k per year to run Lichess (twitter.com)
407.
Foobar2000 (foobar2000.org)
408.
Open Infrastructure Map (openinframap.org)
409.
Poll: Is the leetcode grind necessary to land a high paying remote job?
410.
A surprisingly hard CS problem: sums of square roots (2018) (shlegeris.com)
411.
Healthy soil is key to feeding the world (worldsensorium.com)
412.
The impact of sexual abuse on female development: a longitudinal study (ncbi.nlm.nih.gov)
413.
Facebook versus The BMJ: when fact checking goes wrong (bmj.com)
414.
Lufthansa confirmed that 18k flights had been flown empty to keep slots (airlive.net)
415.
Drone carrying a defibrillator saves its first heart attack patient in Sweden (theverge.com)
416.
Intel removes Xinjiang references from shareholder letter (nasdaq.com)
417.
Tokyo: A big city that is also pleasant to live in (economist.com)
418.
LTO Tape data storage for Linux nerds (blog.benjojo.co.uk)
419.
Systemd service sandboxing and security hardening (2020) (ctrl.blog)
420.
Why skyscrapers are so short (worksinprogress.co)