August 2022 Archive
751.
Google blocked my Chrome extension so I created a website to host it (extensionhub.site)
752.
Stable Diffusion launch announcement (stability.ai)
753.
The Reason Why Are Trucks Getting Bigger (toddofmischief.blogspot.com)
754.
Give nothing, expect nothing: Gitlab latest punching bag for entitled users (dissociatedpress.net)
755.
TikTok is manipulative, addictive, and harmful to privacy (uxdesign.cc)
756.
Rights, Laws, and Google (stratechery.com)
757.
Bringing back the golden days of Bell Labs (nature.com)
758.
Indian government withdraws Personal Data Protection Bill (accessnow.org)
759.
Ask HN: Any solo game developers here?
760.
W4 Games formed to strengthen Godot ecosystem (w4games.com)
761.
Ethereum Goerli testnet merge goes live before move to proof-of-stake (cnbc.com)
762.
JavaScript hydration is a workaround, not a solution (thenewstack.io)
763.
Launch Attempt Scrubbed (blogs.nasa.gov)
764.
Almost every Ferrari sold since 2005 is being recalled (arstechnica.com)
765.
Requiring MFA on popular gem maintainers (blog.rubygems.org)
766.
Advanced Bash-Scripting Guide (2014) (tldp.org)
767.
Launch HN: Polymath Robotics (YC S22) – General autonomy for industrial vehicles
768.
Launch HN: Wolfia (YC S22) – A mobile app emulator you can share with a link
769.
M2 MacBook Air scores higher on Windows 11 GeekBench than pricier Dell laptop (cultofmac.com)
770.
Google Maps' moat is evaporating (2020) (joemorrison.substack.com)
771.
Learning algebra in my 60s (theguardian.com)
772.
Software engineering research questions (neverworkintheory.org)
773.
Xv6, a simple Unix-like teaching operating system (pdos.csail.mit.edu)
774.
Muxfs – a mirroring, checksumming, and self-healing filesystem layer for OpenBSD (sdadams.org)
775.
Using Firecracker and Go to run short, untrusted code execution jobs (2021) (stanislas.blog)
776.
Weylus – Use your tablet as graphic tablet/touch screen on Linux (github.com)
777.
Smoking, alcohol and high BMI are leading risk factors for global cancer deaths (theguardian.com)
778.
Some Epson printers are programmed to stop working after a certain amount of use (gizmodo.com)
779.
AI-designed camera only records objects of interest while being blind to others (cnsi.ucla.edu)
780.
New Intel chips won't play Blu-ray disks due to SGX deprecation (bleepingcomputer.com)