October 2023 Archive
7411.
Researchers create first-ever map of a single animal's early visual system (medicalxpress.com)
7412.
Why the Four-Day Week Is Rocking the World of Work (zdnet.com)
7413.
Microsoft, Amazon facing UK antitrust probe over cloud services (cnn.com)
7414.
Scientists unlock the secrets of a sixth basic flavor (phys.org)
7415.
Oldest evidence of human cannibalism as a funerary practice (phys.org)
7416.
Earliest Human Footprints in North America Verified at 23,000 Years Old (iflscience.com)
7417.
Distance Functions (iquilezles.org)
7418.
Solar Eclipse 2024 (andywoodruff.com)
7419.
Show HN: Supervision, reusable computer vision utilities (github.com)
7420.
AI was asked to create images of Black African docs treating white kids (npr.org)
7421.
Google’s seven-year Pixel update promise is historic – or meaningless (theverge.com)
7422.
It Sure Looks Like Europe Came Damn Close to Another War Last Month (vice.com)
7423.
OpenStack 2023.2 Bobcat for Ubuntu 22.04 LTS (wrestlingpenguins.wordpress.com)
7424.
Mojo v0.4.0 has been released (docs.modular.com)
7425.
Mapbox releases MapGPT as AI for drivers (mapbox.com)
7426.
Today the FTX jury suffered through a code review (theverge.com)
7427.
23andMe User Data Stolen in Targeted Attack on Ashkenazi Jews (wired.com)
7428.
Sslh – Use HTTPS and SSH on the same port (github.com)
7429.
Generating QR Codes with Stable Diffusion (reticulated.net)
7430.
How AI is supercharging political disinformation ops (codastory.com)
7431.
April King: "Can't get iOS 17 and 1Password to stop fighting" (macaw.social)
7432.
Threads Cannot be Implemented as a Library [pdf] (my.eng.utah.edu)
7433.
Oxidizing OCaml: Data Race Freedom (blog.janestreet.com)
7434.
Rust: Polonius Update (blog.rust-lang.org)
7435.
What's up with the temperature sensor on the Pixel 8 Pro? (theverge.com)
7436.
Things I won't work with: hexanitrohexaazaisowurtzitane (2011) (science.org)
7437.
18th-century mathematics shows simpler AI models don't need deep learning (techxplore.com)
7438.
7439.
7440.
New Mexico fossil footprints suggest humans have been here longer than thought (text.npr.org)