The Lost Japanese ROM of the Macintosh Plus
journaldulapin.com
Coding without a laptop: Two weeks with AR glasses and Linux on Android
holdtherobot.com
AniSora: Open-source anime video generation model
komiko.app
FreeBASIC is a free/open source BASIC compiler for Windows DOS and Linux
freebasic.net
Dead Stars Don't Radiate
johncarlosbaez.wordpress.com
Proton threatens to quit Switzerland over new surveillance law
techradar.com
Palette lighting tricks on the Nintendo 64
30fps.net
If nothing is curated, how do we find things
tadaima.bearblog.dev
How to have the browser pick a contrasting color in CSS
webkit.org
Bike-mounted sensor could boost the mapping of safe cycling routes
newatlas.com
Understanding Transformers via N-gram Statistics
arxiv.org
Push Ifs Up and Fors Down
matklad.github.io
Espanso – Cross-Platform Text Expander Written in Rust
github.com
Federal agencies continue terminating all funding to Harvard
arstechnica.com
"Streaming vs. Batch" Is a Wrong Dichotomy, and I Think It's Confusing
morling.dev
Unspoken Currency of Office Politics: Leverage and Sanction Between Coworkers
graphthinking.blogspot.com
Show HN: I built a knife steel comparison tool
new.knife.day
Weather Report from Saturn's Moon Titan
sci.news
O2 VoLTE: locating any customer with a phone call
mastdatabase.co.uk
Can V Deliver on Its Promises?
bitshifters.cc
A library of words: Discovering Roget's Thesaurus (2023)
austinkleon.substack.com
Pyrefly: A new type checker and IDE experience for Python
engineering.fb.com
The author notes:
> since around 1962, publishers have abandoned the side-by-side layout of opposing categories which Roget insisted on as a visual representation of the opposing ideas
illustrated by the original's side-by-side entries for 615 Good and 616 Evil, seeing this as an unfortunate
> example of one of the many ways book design is actually getting less sophisticated over time.
It appears the Gutenberg project also see value in preserving the two columns, at least in their html edition, as can be seen in their rendition of the same passages: https://www.gutenberg.org/cache/epub/10681/pg10681-images.ht.... (Link is to a 10M html file).
(Though it seems things have moved on, since Evil is now #619.)
Surely there must be more programmatic electronic editions, though, given the highly tractable organisation of the book?