April 2023 Archive
991.
WordGrinder: Terminal-based distraction free word processor (github.com)
992.
Haxe 4.3 (haxe.org)
993.
Using ultrasound attack to disarm a smart-home system (theregister.com)
994.
Tuql: Automatically create a GraphQL server from a SQLite database (github.com)
995.
A Cryptographic Near Miss (words.filippo.io)
996.
Pico Cray – Small scale distributed computing (extremeelectronics.co.uk)
997.
Packet, where are you? – eBPF-based Linux kernel networking debugger (github.com)
998.
Now live for all: Substack Notes (on.substack.com)
999.
Adding capacity to the electricity grid is not a simple task (economist.com)
1000.
Salesforce is shuttering Slack’s remote work research group Future Forum (finance.yahoo.com)
1001.
Fire Mark Zuckerberg (ez.substack.com)
1002.
India's Forgotten Mansions (bbc.com)
1003.
Mass editing memory in a transformer (memit.baulab.info)
1004.
Libreboot 20230423 (libreboot.org)
1005.
Big Ball of Mud (1999) (laputan.org)
1006.
An introduction to zero-knowledge machine learning (worldcoin.org)
1007.
Why Perl? (two-wrongs.com)
1008.
Listen to Steve Huffman tell the story of how Reddit got started (pod.link)
1009.
Performance excuses debunked (computerenhance.com)
1010.
OpenWRT 22.03.4 (github.com)
1011.
Tax Evasion at the Top of the Income Distribution: Theory and Evidence (2021) [pdf] (nber.org)
1012.
Null Island is one of the most visited places on Earth, and it doesn’t exist (atlasobscura.com)
1013.
Saudi company draws unlimited Arizona ground water amid drought (cbsnews.com)
1014.
Fun with fluorescence in olive oil (2012) (aapt.scitation.org)
1015.
Longevity study across 5 species found a new pathway to reverse aging (singularityhub.com)
1016.
Misalignment Museum (niche-museums.com)
1017.
Microsoft / JARVIS: a system to connect LLMs with ML community (github.com)
1018.
Current architectural best practices for LLM applications (mattboegner.com)
1019.
Experimenting with LLMs to Research, Reflect, and Plan (eugeneyan.com)
1020.
Schools bought millions of Chromebooks and 3 years later they’re breaking down (theverge.com)