March 2023 Archive
16921.
Ask HN: Should I make my developer API product open source?
16922.
Can Australia curb its killer cats? (bbc.com)
16923.
A WunderBAR Story (os2museum.com)
16924.
Offensive AI Compilation (jiep.github.io)
16925.
What Plants Are Saying About Us (nautil.us)
16926.
Etsy warns sellers of delay in processing payments due to SVB collapse (nbcnews.com)
16927.
A guide to improving the candidate experience for software engineer interviews (devscreen.io)
16928.
FDIC Races to Start Returning Some Uninsured SVB Deposits on Monday (bloomberg.com)
16929.
Hash Tables FTW (os2museum.com)
16930.
Silicon Valley Bank Shutdown: Implications for Startups and VCs (fintechfri.day)
16931.
Things Unlearned After a Decade of Programming (scattered-thoughts.net)
16932.
Google’s Plan to Catch ChatGPT Is to Stuff AI into Everything (bloomberg.com)
16933.
Italy just became a real-time case study in female leadership (theconversation.com)
16934.
God Plays Chess (2018) (en.chessbase.com)
16935.
The Jesus Movement and the Church of Satan as Reactionary Psychological Warfare (leviathan-supersystem.tumblr.com)
16936.
Show HN: Edit the Dynamic Island and iPhone Notch (apps.apple.com)
16937.
Decarbonization pathways for the cement and concrete cycle (2021) [pdf] (climateworks.org)
16938.
Silicon Valley Bank Served the Tech Industry and Beyond (finance.yahoo.com)
16939.
Now You Have Three Problems (github.com)
16940.
How to Start a Niche Website for Less Than $6 per Month (copy.ink)
16941.
Khosla Ventures Tells Some Startups Firm Will Cover Payroll (finance.yahoo.com)
16942.
How to Solve a 25-Story Rubik’s Cube (nytimes.com)
16943.
The Old Pro is returning to downtown Palo Alto (padailypost.com)
16944.
16945.
How LLMs work: common misconceptions, components and processes (nigamanth.com)
16946.
Operant Conditioning (en.wikipedia.org)
16947.
All Polygons and MultiPolygons should follow the right hand-rule (ruky.me)
16948.
Red-black trees for BPF programs (lwn.net)
16949.
HP is blocking third-party printer ink again (theverge.com)
16950.
The Fraud-Detection Business Has a Dirty Secret (wired.com)