October 2022 Archive
1921.
Why Kubernetes is so complex (cloudplane.org)
1922.
Rex: The World's Smallest PDA [video] (youtube.com)
1923.
Ask HN: How did you become better at programming?
1924.
Leap Technology (1987) [video] (youtube.com)
1925.
Questioning vs. Asking (candost.blog)
1926.
The Amiga Story: Conceived at Atari, Born at Commodore (2016) (lowendmac.com)
1927.
Show HN: PyTorch search engine (you.com)
1928.
Recursive Functions of Symbolic Expressions Computation by Machine (1960) (www-formal.stanford.edu)
1929.
Smartcard: Roland Moreno's Ubiquitous Invention (artsandculture.google.com)
1930.
The Horrors of the Alpha Channel [video] (youtube.com)
1931.
Two new books show that movement helps us see the rhythms we all share (theatlantic.com)
1932.
Show HN: Lance – Deep Learning with DuckDB and Arrow (github.com)
1933.
I tried to add EV chargers to my rental property (canarymedia.com)
1934.
Man sells 3D-printed firearms to a buyback program for $21,000 (interestingengineering.com)
1935.
One store’s decision to leave San Francisco over crime (theatlantic.com)
1936.
Ask HN: What to do to be healthy when old?
1937.
Ask HN: GDPR in 2022 – What do I need to know as a solo founder?
1938.
Don’t let the great ESG self-deception infect climate tech investing (maddyness.com)
1939.
Entering Twitter HQ – let that sink in (twitter.com)
1940.
BBSing at 300 Bits per Second (jcs.org)
1941.
Show HN: Villagers – A group travel app (villagersapp.com)
1942.
Elm at a Billion Dollar Company with Vendr CTO Aaron White [audio] (elm-radio.com)
1943.
Cheapest 10GbE 8-Port Switch TP-Link TL-ST1008F Review (servethehome.com)
1944.
Hilma af Klint: Swedish mystic hailed as pioneer of abstract art (theguardian.com)
1945.
Why Is That Funny? (nautil.us)
1946.
What influences keyboard input speed (2018) (next.wooting.io)
1947.
How Palantir Will Steal the NHS (doctorow.medium.com)
1948.
Why you can’t trust CPUID (chipsandcheese.com)
1949.
Tesla has lost more market cap in 30 days than any other company in history (twitter.com)
1950.
In a Way, 3D Scanning Is over a Century Old (hackaday.com)