December 2023 Archive
121.
Nuclear Reactor Simulator (dalton-nrs.manchester.ac.uk)
122.
Polish Hackers that repaired DRM trains threatened by train company (404media.co)
123.
YouTuber sentenced to 6 months in prison for obstructing probe into plane crash (justice.gov)
124.
I forked SteamOS for my living room PC (iliana.fyi)
125.
Valetudo – Cloud replacement for vacuum robots enabling local-only operation (valetudo.cloud)
126.
Why is Jepsen written in Clojure? (aphyr.com)
127.
MemoryCache: Augmenting local AI with browser data (future.mozilla.org)
128.
You've just been fucked by psyops [video] (media.ccc.de)
129.
A lost X-Files song (twitter.com)
130.
Dogbolt Decompiler Explorer (dogbolt.org)
131.
Fantasy Map Brushes (kmalexander.com)
132.
The New Essential Guide to Electronics in Shenzhen (bunniestudios.com)
133.
Amazon's Silent Sacking (justingarrison.com)
134.
W4 Games raises $15M to drive video game development with Godot Engine (w4games.com)
135.
The economics of all-you-can-eat buffets (2020) (thehustle.co)
136.
Ask HN: What's your "it's not stupid if it works" story?
137.
Show HN: Simulate 3D plants in the browser (plant.max-richter.dev)
138.
Interviewing my mother, a mainframe COBOL programmer (2016) (ezali.substack.com)
139.
4-year campaign backdoored iPhones using advanced exploit (arstechnica.com)
140.
Show HN: I Remade the Fake Google Gemini Demo, Except Using GPT-4 and It's Real (sagittarius.greg.technology)
141.
Maybe getting rid of your QA team was bad (davidkcaudill.medium.com)
142.
Volkswagen, Porsche, and Audi say they will use Tesla's EV charging plug (theverge.com)
143.
"I just bought a 2024 Chevy Tahoe for $1" (twitter.com)
144.
Show HN: Open-source macOS AI copilot using vision and voice (github.com)
145.
I Love Ruby (eliseshaffer.com)
146.
I'm skeptical of low-code (nick.scialli.me)
147.
SSH over HTTPS (trofi.github.io)
148.
Breakdown of faults by car brand: Tesla has replaced Dacia at the bottom (tuvsud.com)
149.
Moderna's mRNA cancer vaccine works better than thought (freethink.com)
150.
Chrome's next weapon in the War on Ad Blockers: Slower extension updates (arstechnica.com)