November 2022 Archive
2911.
Is Elon Right? (refactoring.fm)
2912.
Ask HN: Who runs a small/medium website supported by ads?
2913.
About political messages on the Rust blog (poignardazur.github.io)
2914.
FTX and How to Lose Money (readmargins.com)
2915.
The Psychopharmacology of the FTX Crash (astralcodexten.substack.com)
2916.
Ukraïnśka Latynka (github.com)
2917.
Someone bought a similar domain and copied all of the content – wdyd?
2918.
“14-hour days with no break, no bathroom”: Jeff Bezos sued by former housekeeper (news.sky.com)
2919.
How many publications did SBF bribe? (twitter.com)
2920.
Twitter plans to order remaining workers back to office after layoffs (axios.com)
2921.
“[Twitter] is doing 1000 poorly batched RPCs just to render a home timeline” (twitter.com)
2922.
Ask HN: Why is my two day old submit on HN frontpage shown as 1 hour old?
2923.
Learn HTML + CSS with a text adventure course (frobocode.com)
2924.
A History of Oxford University Computing Services (2008) (web.archive.org)
2925.
Teflon microplastics and nanoplastics released from non-stick cookware (sciencedirect.com)
2926.
Show HN: AI Powered Bloomberg Terminal Alternative for Individuals (gorillaterminal.com)
2927.
New Mac app wants to record everything you do–so you can “rewind” it later (arstechnica.com)
2928.
Re: Please don't drop support for AmigaOS (lists.gnu.org)
2929.
Baking bread with a hot car (twitter.com)
2930.
Verbatim no longer sells real M Discs, now puts regular BD-Rs in MDisc packaging (old.reddit.com)
2931.
Ask HN: Best Books on Systems Theory?
2932.
The Enigma of John Donne (thenation.com)
2933.
Project One (San Francisco) (en.wikipedia.org)
2934.
SnapRAID (github.com)
2935.
Apple to lay off a third of its workers (1997) (wired.com)
2936.
A collection of tips to help you improve your CSS skills (github.com)
2937.
Berlin startup to wrap homes in 'second skin' as heating costs soar (reuters.com)
2938.
Time to curb the data brokers (nature.com)
2939.
The Truth About Nvidia’s RTX 4090 Adapters: Testing, X-Ray, & 12VHPWR Failures (youtube.com)
2940.
Research Proves Your Brain Needs Breaks (microsoft.com)