August 2022 Archive
211.
Introduction to Apple Silicon (github.com)
212.
.NET 6 is now in Ubuntu 22.04 (devblogs.microsoft.com)
213.
Cloudflare stood up to a patent troll and won (2019) (blog.cloudflare.com)
214.
How fast is 12th Gen Intel Core? (frame.work)
215.
“Quantum-Safe” Crypto Hacked by 10-Year-Old PC (spectrum.ieee.org)
216.
Why are D-sharp and E-flat considered to be two different notes? (ethanhein.com)
217.
Ask HN: I want to be an expert in many things but my lifetime won't be enough
218.
Common tech jobs described as cabals of Mesoamerican wizards (etiennefd.substack.com)
219.
The hardest people for founders to hire are so called C-level executives (twitter.com)
220.
Local simulation feature to be removed from all Autodesk Fusion 360 versions (knowledge.autodesk.com)
221.
I assure you, medieval people bathed (2019) (going-medieval.com)
222.
Why is Snowflake so expensive (blog.devgenius.io)
223.
Visual Sum of Cubes (x.st)
224.
Shazam turns 20 (apple.com)
225.
Counterfeits, fraud, and theft: Why Silca changed its return policy (cyclingtips.com)
226.
American chestnut tree in Centreville is the 'holy grail' for conservationists (delawareonline.com)
227.
“Science must respect the dignity and rights of all humans” (nature.com)
228.
Color has been disappearing from the world (tumblr.macleodsawyer.com)
229.
Supabase – Realtime: Multiplayer Edition (supabase.com)
230.
Chrome was delivered without any sprints at all (2021) (twitter.com)
231.
Being swamped is normal and not impressive (gkogan.co)
232.
Retirement of Amazon MOBI eBook file format (microsoftpressstore.com)
233.
Republishing a fork of the sanctioned Tornado Cash repositories (twitter.com)
234.
Orcas are breaking rudders off boats in Europe (smithsonianmag.com)
235.
DuckDuckGo email protection beta now open (spreadprivacy.com)
236.
Linux 5.19 (lwn.net)
237.
Git In Two Minutes (updated after 8 years) (garyrobinson.net)
238.
How SQLite Helps You Do ACID (fly.io)
239.
Tesla Virtual Power Plant (tesla.com)
240.
Facebook Gave Police Teenager's DMs in Abortion Prosecution (forbes.com)