March 2023 Archive
811.
The Smallest Hash Table (orlp.net)
812.
Stanford’s war against its own students (thefp.com)
813.
When did New York start building slowly? (constructionphysics.substack.com)
814.
Category Theory Illustrated (abuseofnotation.github.io)
815.
Watch the Watchers: LAPD officer database (watchthewatchers.net)
816.
AI fooled voice recognition to verify identity used by Australian tax office (theguardian.com)
817.
Tether elements to each other with CSS anchor positioning (developer.chrome.com)
818.
Five years of indie hacking (allisonseboldt.com)
819.
GPTs Are GPTs: An Early Look at the Labor Market Impact Potential of LLMs (arxiv.org)
820.
Twitter’s $42k-per-month API prices out nearly everyone (wired.com)
821.
Salesforce Lays Off 8k While Paying Matthew McConaughey $10M/Yr to Sit Around (futurism.com)
822.
Prompt Engineering: Steer a large pretrained language model to do what you want (lilianweng.github.io)
823.
Instead of paying adults more, states let companies hire kids for labor shortage (businessinsider.com)
824.
The simplicity of single-file Golang deployments (amazingcto.com)
825.
Atlassian to shed 5 per cent of workers (abc.net.au)
826.
You cannot have exactly-once delivery (2015) (bravenewgeek.com)
827.
Mark Zuckerberg: “Please Resign” (2010) (techemails.com)
828.
Kubernetes is hard (rcwz.pl)
829.
Emulating Pokemon Emerald on GPT-4 (twitter.com)
830.
Fix Intel CPU Throttling on Linux (github.com)
831.
The perks workers want also make them more productive (fivethirtyeight.com)
832.
An Open-Source Espresso (hackaday.com)
833.
Effing-mad, an effect library for Rust (github.com)
834.
US-Japan team hails H2-boron plasma fusion breakthrough (rechargenews.com)
835.
Banshees of Inisherin: The Game (bansheesthegame.com)
836.
Who becomes an entrepreneur? Insights from research studies (generalist.com)
837.
An Update on Dianna's Health (Physics Girl) [video] (youtube.com)
838.
Pyroscope and Grafana Phlare join together (grafana.com)
839.
Federal Reserve lent $300B in emergency funds to banks in the past week (pbs.org)
840.
Zig: The Modern Alternative to C (infoworld.com)