December 2022 Archive
4591.
Twitter is now marking all links to Mastodon unsafe (twitter.com)
4592.
Elon Musk's Twitter suspension of journalists draws global backlash (reuters.com)
4593.
Blender 3.3.2 LTS (blender.org)
4594.
How to sign up for Mastodon: A guide to using the Twitter alternative (washingtonpost.com)
4595.
‘Our weapons are computers’: Ukrainian coders aim to gain battlefield edge (theguardian.com)
4596.
Apple’s working on several monitors – including an updated Pro Display XDR (theverge.com)
4597.
4598.
4599.
Tesla accused of illegally firing two employees after they criticized Elon Musk (theverge.com)
4600.
An MSG seasoning company became a serious player in the semiconductor industry (qz.com)
4601.
Critical Windows code-execution vulnerability went undetected until now (arstechnica.com)
4602.
Elon Musk Says He Will Resign as Twitter CEO When He Finds Successor (nytimes.com)
4603.
Apple Could Open Its App Store Without Opening Its App Store (eff.org)
4604.
MariaDB value plunges by 52% in first two days as a public company (bizjournals.com)
4605.
4606.
Show HN: Fully offline, open-source alternative to Scribe for Firefox (addons.mozilla.org)
4607.
Firefox and Tumblr join rush to support Mastodon social network (theguardian.com)
4608.
How did Bankman-Fried secure $250M bail? (reuters.com)
4609.
Between the living and the dead: painted portraits in Late Antiquity (cambridge.org)
4610.
Asus pushes Intel's Core i9 13900K over 9GHz, setting new world record (pcgamer.com)
4611.
One of the World’s Poorest Countries Put Its Faith in Crypto – Why? (vice.com)
4612.
Twitter said to be shutting down/scaling back datacenters starting January (twitter.com)
4613.
Another World on FPGA (twitter.com)
4614.
4615.
The Creative Space of Play: D.W. Winnicott (2010) (onluminousgrounds.wordpress.com)
4616.
Wine 8.0-Rc2 Released (winehq.org)
4617.
Amazon begins drone deliveries in California and Texas (arstechnica.com)
4618.
4619.
Firefighting Foam Spilled at Red Hill Before. The Navy Didn’t Notify Anyone (civilbeat.org)
4620.
Crabs Have Evolved Five Separate Times – Why Do the Same Forms Keep Coming Back? (theconversation.com)