February 2023 Archive
1.
Bing: “I will not harm you unless you harm me first” (simonwillison.net)
2.
Visual design rules you can safely follow (anthonyhobday.com)
3.
Nokia launches DIY repairable budget Android phone (theguardian.com)
4.
A GPT in 60 Lines of NumPy (jaykmody.com)
5.
Easter egg in flight path of last 747 delivery flight (flightradar24.com)
6.
Stop the proposal on mass surveillance of the EU (mullvad.net)
7.
My daughter's school took over my personal Microsoft account (jeffgeerling.com)
8.
Play Counter Strike 1.6, with full multiplayer, in the browser (play-cs.com)
9.
Tell HN: Firefox Is an awesome browser right now
10.
ChatGPT Plus (openai.com)
11.
Social media is a cause, not a correlate, of mental illness in teen girls (jonathanhaidt.substack.com)
12.
Jailbreak Chat: A collection of ChatGPT jailbreaks (jailbreakchat.com)
13.
Tell HN: DEI initiatives undermine the self esteem of PoC within a company
14.
What is ChatGPT doing and why does it work? (writings.stephenwolfram.com)
15.
Bing AI can't be trusted (dkb.blog)
16.
Reverse engineering a mysterious UDP stream in my hotel (2016) (gkbrk.com)
17.
TabFS – a browser extension that mounts the browser tabs as a filesystem (omar.website)
18.
The Missing Semester of Your CS Education (missing.csail.mit.edu)
19.
Bard and new AI features in Search (blog.google)
20.
Lab leak most likely origin of Covid-19 pandemic, U.S. agency now says (wsj.com)
21.
Last Flight Out (brr.fyi)
22.
AI Generated Seinfeld runs 24/7 on Twitch (twitch.tv)
23.
So what’s next (personal news from developer of popular CoreJS polyfill) (github.com)
24.
Big data is dead (motherduck.com)
25.
Web Push for Web Apps on iOS and iPadOS (webkit.org)
26.
GitHub to lay off 10% and close all offices (twitter.com)
27.
Let's build a Chrome extension that steals as much data as possible (mattfrisbie.substack.com)
28.
Connecticut parents arrested for letting kids walk to Dunkin' Donuts (reason.com)
29.
Starting February 9, we will no longer support free access to the Twitter API (twitter.com)
30.
Google and Mozilla are working on iOS browsers that aren't based on WebKit (theregister.com)