April 2022 Archive
91.
Changing std:sort at Google’s scale and beyond (danlark.org)
92.
3,200-year-old Egyptian tablet records excuses for why people missed work (openculture.com)
93.
Success and Failure at Pebble (medium.com)
94.
James Webb telescope's coldest instrument reaches operating temperature (phys.org)
95.
Internet spring cleaning: How to delete Instagram, Facebook and other accounts (blog.mozilla.org)
96.
Git security vulnerability announced (github.blog)
97.
Noto emoji, a new black and white emoji font with less color (developers.googleblog.com)
98.
Snap launches its first drone (pixy.com)
99.
Elon Musk owns 9.2% of Twitter (sec.gov)
100.
Google Docs will “warn you away from inappropriate words” (twitter.com)
101.
Why the past 10 years of American life have been uniquely stupid (theatlantic.com)
102.
Horrible edge cases when dealing with music (dustri.org)
103.
Mataroa blog – Naked blogging platform for minimalists (mataroa.blog)
104.
Three areas where Google Search lags behind competitors: code, cooking, travel (surgehq.ai)
105.
Pens and Tablets for Linux (community.wacom.com)
106.
10 years since Google said to “hang tight” about Linux support for Google Drive (abevoelker.github.io)
107.
Ask HN: Have you used SQLite as a primary database?
108.
I put my whole life into a single database (krausefx.com)
109.
Elon has decided not to join our board (twitter.com)
110.
Why I'll never use Affirm again (gist.github.com)
111.
Switching from pyenv, rbenv, goenv and nvm to asdf (jinyuz.dev)
112.
Heaps: A free, open-source and cross-platform game engine (heaps.io)
113.
The bottom is dropping out of Netflix (pajiba.com)
114.
What happens if you try to download and install Firefox on Windows (twitter.com)
115.
Atlassian: We estimate the rebuilding effort to last for up to 2 more weeks (twitter.com)
116.
A project with a single 11,000-line code file (austinhenley.com)
117.
Algorithms for Decision Making [pdf] (algorithmsbook.com)
118.
Memray: a memory profiler for Python (github.com)
119.
A dirty dish by the sink can be a big marriage problem (theatlantic.com)
120.
SELinux is unmanageable; just turn it off if it gets in your way (ctrl.blog)