September 2023 Archive
1801.
Announcement regarding possible offer (investors.mariadb.com)
1802.
Some reasons to avoid Cython (pythonspeed.com)
1803.
I2c-USB-hub: An i2C Controllable USB 2.0 Hub (github.com)
1804.
How to raise a child with taste in eighteenth-century Britain (laphamsquarterly.org)
1805.
Crowdfunding a defense for scientific research (vox.com)
1806.
Steam-on-Ampere (github.com)
1807.
Bigger, better, faster, more (blog.nearlyfreespeech.net)
1808.
Generating chess puzzles with generic algorithms (2022) (propelauth.com)
1809.
Pysentation: CLI for displaying Python presentations (github.com)
1810.
OpenBSD Webzine #14 (webzine.puffy.cafe)
1811.
Simple math moves the needle (quantamagazine.org)
1812.
Is Unity allowed to just change its fee structure like that? (arstechnica.com)
1813.
South Korea has jailed a man for using AI to create sexual images of children (cnn.com)
1814.
Ask HN: How do you use AI to get things done faster?
1815.
The History of Windows NT 3.1 (abortretry.fail)
1816.
Why everything you buy is worse now [video] (youtube.com)
1817.
Is this ‘which’ dead? (grammarphobia.com)
1818.
Ask HN: What are some communities like HN?
1819.
Searching for “notepad” on DuckDuckGo yields zero results (duckduckgo.com)
1820.
AI language models can exceed PNG and FLAC in lossless compression, says study (arstechnica.com)
1821.
Wireless electrical–molecular quantum signalling for cancer cell apoptosis (nature.com)
1822.
A Line at a Time: The Atari 2600, Now with S-Video (nicole.express)
1823.
Bruno: Open-Source IDE for Exploring and Testing APIs (github.com)
1824.
Follow up to “Changing the rules of Rust” (without.boats)
1825.
Blogscroll – an open-source directory of personal blogs and digital gardens (blogscroll.com)
1826.
Ex-Apple employee files RICO lawsuit over whistleblower retaliation (appleinsider.com)
1827.
To build ships that break ice, U.S. must relearn to cut steel (wsj.com)
1828.
A.I. and the Next Generation of Drone Warfare (newyorker.com)
1829.
On Robots Killing People (schneier.com)
1830.
Target to close 9 stores across four states because of theft and organized crime (cnn.com)