March 2023 Archive
9811.
Blue Zones Bullshit (180degreehealth.com)
9812.
EA Lays Off over 200 Apex Legends Testers over Zoom Call (kotaku.com)
9813.
How to sell a developer tool with 1M users
9814.
On mindsets, mind shifts and wins (davestewart.co.uk)
9815.
Bot for participating in cookie-based raffles on SteamGift (github.com)
9816.
The Best of the Best: Classic Video Games (stonertalkshow.tv)
9817.
thispersondoesnotexist.com redirects Stability.ai – Why?
9818.
Ernest Dimnet, the Art of Thinking (gutenberg.net.au)
9819.
ChatGPT as a Garden of Forking Paths (alpa84.github.io)
9820.
An in-depth look at the first Amiga tracker: The Ultimate SoundTracker (youtube.com)
9821.
Bank of England £100M Note (en.wikipedia.org)
9822.
Employers failing to offer hybrid work risk losing out in recruitment (theregister.com)
9823.
Japan Buys Supercomputer Just to Predict Torrential Downpours (nextplatform.com)
9824.
The point of Web Components was modularity and encapsulation (twitter.com)
9825.
Single Syscall “Hello, World” (sgibala.com)
9826.
Apple seems to be as confused about the Mac Pro as we are (macworld.com)
9827.
The Huanan market was the epicenter of SARS-CoV-2 emergence (zenodo.org)
9828.
China, Belarus presidents call for establishing peace in Ukraine (aljazeera.com)
9829.
Breaks taken during psych experiments lower participants’ moods (arstechnica.com)
9830.
How to Correct for Confirmation Bias (eftegarie.com)
9831.
Rare Jurassic-era bug found at Arkansas Walmart (bbc.com)
9832.
Watch Syntiant’s 1-Milliwatt Chip Play Doom (spectrum.ieee.org)
9833.
Terminator Terminal (gnome-terminator.org)
9834.
IBM Plans to Acquire NS1 (newsroom.ibm.com)
9835.
Show HN: Sidekick – Read the f***ing manual with ChatGPT (sidekick-web.vercel.app)
9836.
How the NIH Pushes DEI on Scientists (wsj.com)
9837.
Elden Ring Director Turns to Escape from Tarkov for Inspiration (kotaku.com)
9838.
Tesla confirms its next Gigafactory will be in Mexico (theverge.com)
9839.
AI-Generated Worlds in VR (twitter.com)
9840.
Revolutionary Stroke Treatment Will Save Millions of Lives. Eventually (nytimes.com)