March 2025 Archive
301.
The Internals of PostgreSQL (interdb.jp)
302.
Anthropic raises $3.5B at $61.5B valuation (nytimes.com)
303.
Posthog/.cursorrules (github.com)
304.
An investigation into egg prices (thebignewsletter.com)
305.
Magnesium Self-Experiments (gwern.net)
306.
Building websites with lots of little HTML pages (blog.jim-nielsen.com)
307.
Planes are having their GPS hacked. Could new clocks keep them safe? (bbc.com)
308.
DOJ: Google must sell Chrome, Android could be next (arstechnica.com)
309.
Walt Disney's MultiPlane Camera (Filmed Feb. 13, 1957) [video] (youtube.com)
310.
Google will still have to break up its business, the Justice Department said (engadget.com)
311.
Macron to open debate on extending French nuclear protection to European allies (reuters.com)
312.
The Return of Digg, a Star of an Earlier Internet Era (nytimes.com)
313.
Bye, Prime (tbray.org)
314.
Ask HN: Who wants to be hired? (March 2025)
315.
Yes, Claude Code can decompile itself. Here's the source code (ghuntley.com)
316.
Local Deep Research – ArXiv, wiki and other searches included (github.com)
317.
Real Chilling Effects (donmoynihan.substack.com)
318.
A new Sudoku layout with 81 uniquely shaped cells (danielchasehooper.com)
319.
Xcode constantly phones home (lapcatsoftware.com)
320.
Finland's National Allergy Program Successfully Reduces Allergic Diseases (publications.ersnet.org)
321.
Optimistic Locking in B-Trees (cedardb.com)
322.
Show HN: Beating Pokemon Red with RL and <10M Parameters (drubinstein.github.io)
323.
How did places like Bell Labs know how to ask the right questions? (2023) (freaktakes.com)
324.
DeepSeek focuses on research over revenue (ft.com)
325.
Mayo Clinic's secret weapon against AI hallucinations: Reverse RAG in action (venturebeat.com)
326.
MCP vs. API Explained (norahsakal.com)
327.
Shenmue (1999) reverse engineering reveals possible sun position oversight (wulinshu.com)
328.
Sam Bankman-Fried thrown into solitary over Tucker Carlson interview: report (gizmodo.com)
329.
2025 Hiring Pause (hr.cornell.edu)
330.
56k modems relied on digital trunk lines (hackaday.com)