February 2023 Archive
11581.
11582.
11583.
Why you should work asynchronously
(ben.balter.com)
11584.
Psychedelics Slip Past Cell Membranes When Treating Depression
(the-scientist.com)
11585.
11587.
Why It’s So Hard to Slice Cheese
(wsj.com)
11588.
An Ode to Jimmy Carter, the Outdoors President
(outsideonline.com)
11589.
I feel like I’ve been training my whole life for this moment
(franklantz.substack.com)
11590.
The Keith Jarrett Interview (Rick Beato)
(youtube.com)
11591.
‘Synchronous Spawning’ Has Been Baffling Scientists for Centuries
(theatlantic.com)
11592.
Buckminster Fuller
(en.wikipedia.org)
11593.
In 1962 I was a Conservative
(twitter.com)
11594.
11595.
A deep dive inside the Rust front end for GCC
(fosdem.org)
11596.
Alexa, What Happened?
(readmargins.com)
11597.
Real-time recovery and recognition of motion blurry QR code image (2019)
(ietresearch.onlinelibrary.wiley.com)
11598.
Glittering Generality
(en.wikipedia.org)
11599.
11600.
The Oasis “counter-hack” and the centralization of DeFi
(newsletter.mollywhite.net)
11601.
Show HN: Weekly Pandas exercises based on current events and public data
(bambooweekly.com)
11602.
Apache NetBeans 17 Released
(blogs.apache.org)
11603.
Hugging Face Datasets for Machine Learning
(hackernoon.com)
11604.
11605.
11606.
Client-side comments with Mastodon on a static Jekyll website
(jan.wildeboer.net)
11607.
Politics Is The Fun-Killer
(lesswrong.com)
11608.
Detailed History of the PC Bios
(quora.com)
11609.
Cache Oblivious Algorithms
(jiahai-feng.github.io)
11610.
All BBC television channels are now available in HD
(cleanfeed.thetvroom.com)