December 2020 Archive
10741.
“Rudderless” QAnon may reinvent itself after US election, warn experts (arstechnica.com)
10742.
RAM Drive (en.wikipedia.org)
10743.
YouTube Vanced (vancedapp.com)
10744.
University Claims Words ‘Picnic,’ ‘Brown Bag’ Are Offensive (dailywire.com)
10745.
2020: A curated list of the latest breakthroughs in AI (github.com)
10746.
What is radiation? How harmful is it? (backreaction.blogspot.com)
10747.
A New Google (dcgross.com)
10748.
You're Allowed to Make Your Own Tools (swyx.io)
10749.
Bitcoin Tops $26K for First Time, Less Than a Day After Passing $25K (coindesk.com)
10750.
Ravens Measure Up to Great Apes on Intelligence (scientificamerican.com)
10751.
Bill Gates: How to make up for lost time on Covid-19 (icsb.org)
10752.
Security 101 for SaaS Startups (github.com)
10753.
One of the snack bars at Pompeii re-emerges in its entirety (pompeiisites.org)
10754.
The cost of a Ruby threads leakage (mensfeld.pl)
10755.
C++ Compiler Targets the Web (hackaday.com)
10756.
Archaeologists uncover ancient street food shop in Pompeii (reuters.com)
10757.
Mysterious asteroid the size of a dwarf planet is lurking in our solar system (livescience.com)
10758.
Google’s API Design Standard (google.aip.dev)
10759.
Netflix Producer, Yoozoo Games CEO Lin Qi Dead at 39 Amid Poisoning Probe (variety.com)
10760.
Startup Working Hours: Burnout, Pacing, and Hustle Culture (karllhughes.com)
10761.
Apple Neural Engine Patent (patents.google.com)
10762.
Nuclear-Powered Rockets Get a Second Look for Travel to Mars (spectrum.ieee.org)
10763.
Self-Experimenters Make an Initial Attempt at Human Plasma Dilution (fightaging.org)
10764.
Nashville Bomber Linked to 「Custom Alarms Electronics」 Shop (newsweek.com)
10765.
DiamonDie's ASCII Art Tutorial (ludd.ltu.se)
10766.
Covid: 501.V2 Variant (en.wikipedia.org)
10767.
Infinite Pizza (tocogames.itch.io)
10768.
Asynchronous Email: Exim over NNCP (Or UUCP) (changelog.complete.org)
10769.
How to make your baby a genius: “Parentese” (weforum.org)
10770.
It’s time to make tech work for society, not the other way around (wired.co.uk)