October 2022 Archive
31.
SimulaVR Has Been Subpoenaed by Meta Platforms, Inc (simulavr.com)
32.
The PS5 Has Been Jailbroken (glitched.online)
33.
Apple’s ad business set to boom on the back of its own anti-tracking crackdown (adguard.com)
34.
NASA’s Webb takes star-filled portrait of Pillars of Creation (nasa.gov)
35.
Stadia died because no one trusts Google (techcrunch.com)
36.
How Wine works 101 (werat.dev)
37.
LAPD Officer Killed During Training Exercise Was Investigating Cops About Rape (reason.com)
38.
I Fell 15,000 Feet and Lived (2009) (uss-la-ca135.org)
39.
Private Prisons Are Behind the Push for Homeless Criminalization (invisiblepeople.tv)
40.
Show HN: America – Road Trip Simulator (4m3ric4.com)
41.
EasyList is in trouble and so are many ad blockers (adguard.com)
42.
PostgreSQL 15 (postgresql.org)
43.
Find your Twitter friends on Mastodon (twitodon.com)
44.
Python 3.11.0 final (discuss.python.org)
45.
Meta Quest Pro (meta.com)
46.
EU Passes Law to Switch iPhone to USB-C by End of 2024 (macrumors.com)
47.
What does the ??!??! operator do in C? (stackoverflow.com)
48.
Mastodon.technology Shutdown (ashfurrow.com)
49.
Managers with a business degree reduce employees' wages, do not increase profit (nber.org)
50.
The Illustrated Stable Diffusion (jalammar.github.io)
51.
Turbopack, the successor to Webpack (vercel.com)
52.
Five origami books by Shuzo Fujimoto are now public domain (origami.kosmulski.org)
53.
Companies are paying huge sums to show their ads to bots (wired.com)
54.
75% of the time we spend with our kids in our lifetime will be spent by age 12 (1000hoursoutside.com)
55.
Leap: Neovim’s Answer to the Mouse (github.com)
56.
Tesla engineers were on-site to evaluate the Twitter staff’s code, workers said (washingtonpost.com)
57.
98.css – design system for building faithful recreations of Windows 98 UIs (jdan.github.io)
58.
The deception of “buying” digital movies (worldofmatthew.com)
59.
Google Ad Disguising Itself as www.gimp.org (old.reddit.com)
60.
Mandated diversity statement drives Jonathan Haidt to quit academic society (reason.com)