August 2022 Archive
1651.
Show HN: An opinionated and statically-typed TypeScript SDK generator (easysdk.xyz)
1652.
Google Chrome is getting an RSS feed reader on desktop (ghacks.net)
1653.
A captured American spy plane that crashed during a Hungarian pleasure flight (telex.hu)
1654.
All Algorithms Implemented in Rust (github.com)
1655.
The Signal State – Modular Synth Logic Puzzle Game (signalstate.io)
1656.
Common Lisp Wiki: Naming Conventions (cliki.net)
1657.
Heap Overflows on iOS ARM64 (inversecos.com)
1658.
California to ban the sale of new gasoline cars (nytimes.com)
1659.
Mars is ‘irrelevant to us’ if Earth is doomed, says Kim Stanley Robertson (vice.com)
1660.
New evidence suggests giant asteroid impacts created Earth’s continents (singularityhub.com)
1661.
Top Programming Languages 2022 (spectrum.ieee.org)
1662.
Greenland ice sheet climate disequilibrium and committed (274mm) sea-level rise (nature.com)
1663.
The Up-Goer Five Text Editor (splasho.com)
1664.
How far can you go by train in 5h? (chronotrains.com)
1665.
Halligan Bar (en.wikipedia.org)
1666.
Parallel Programming for FPGAs (github.com)
1667.
My worst tech decision: A G Suite account for personal use (androidauthority.com)
1668.
Launch HN: Cerrion (YC S22) – Computer vision to reduce production line problems (cerrion.com)
1669.
Programming Cognitive Robots (cs.toronto.edu)
1670.
Computer Networks from Scratch Ch.4 (networksfromscratch.com)
1671.
D.C.-area startup wants to solve the public bathroom problem (washingtonian.com)
1672.
School demands search of text messaging, outside of school (twitter.com)
1673.
Tell HN: Spotify Premium is full of Ads
1674.
The Best Books on the Great Divergence (fivebooks.com)
1675.
WaniKani, a Kanji Learning Application (wanikani.com)
1676.
Could long Covid be linked to herpes viruses? Early data offer a hint (nature.com)
1677.
Crypto Geniuses Who Vaporized a Trillion Dollars (nymag.com)
1678.
Page was served from Nginx on ReactOS (reactos.aaron.cc)
1679.
Zooko's Triangle (en.wikipedia.org)
1680.
'The best thing we can do today to JavaScript is to retire it’ Douglas Crockford (devclass.com)