July 2023 Archive
241.
Free Public WiFi (computer.rip)
242.
Putting the “You” in CPU (cpu.land)
243.
Software engineers hate code (dancowell.com)
244.
3M reaches $10.3B settlement over PFAS contamination of water systems (npr.org)
245.
Help the Library of Congress create games to improve public knowledge of civics (blogs.loc.gov)
246.
Managing Kitchen Fruit Flies with a Little Shop of Horrors (blog.zaccohn.com)
247.
Customers don't want chat bots (creativegood.com)
248.
Is technical analysis just stock market astrology? (alicegg.tech)
249.
Intel exiting the PC business as it stops investment in the Intel NUC (servethehome.com)
250.
Turning my hobby into a business made me hate it (shant.nu)
251.
Gping – ping, but with a graph (github.com)
252.
A fridge from 70 years ago has better features than the fridge I own now (mstdn.social)
253.
Bootstrapping to €600k MRR and getting killed by Shopify: Checkout X (leteyski.com)
254.
“Computer security 80% solved if we deprecate technology shown in this graphic” (twitter.com)
255.
6 days to change 1 line of code (2015) (edw519.posthaven.com)
256.
Chicago95 – Windows 95 Theme for Linux (github.com)
257.
‘No way out’: how video games use tricks from gambling to attract big spenders (theguardian.com)
258.
Firefox 115 can remotely disable any extension on any site (lapcatsoftware.com)
259.
GPT-Prompt-Engineer (github.com)
260.
Show HN: Primo – a visual CMS with Svelte blocks, a code editor, and SSG (primocms.org)
261.
Dementia risk linked to blood-protein imbalance in middle age (nature.com)
262.
Easy SVG sparklines (alexplescan.com)
263.
No-GIL mode coming for Python (lwn.net)
264.
What we know about LLMs (willthompson.name)
265.
Bret Victor update (worrydream.com)
266.
People over-emphasize the recycling aspect of "reduce, reuse, recycle" (futurism.com)
267.
Tips for programmers to stay ahead of generative AI (spectrum.ieee.org)
268.
Show HN: Van, truck or car camp for $0 a night (landcamp.org)
269.
Driver.js: Product tours, highlights, contextual help and more (driverjs.com)
270.
Wireshark Is 25: The email that started it all and lessons learned along the way (blog.wireshark.org)