OBBB signed: Reinstates immediate expensing for U.S.-based R&D
kbkg.com
Being too ambitious is a clever form of self-sabotage
maalvika.substack.com
Mini NASes marry NVMe to Intel's efficient chip
jeffgeerling.com
Learn to love the moat of low status
usefulfictions.substack.com
Sleeping beauty Bitcoin wallets wake up after 14 years to the tune of $2B
marketwatch.com
How to Incapacitate Google Tag Manager and Why You Should (2022)
backlit.neocities.org
Why I left my tech job to work on chronic pain
sailhealth.substack.com
The ITTAGE indirect branch predictor
blog.nelhage.com
The Amiga 3000 Unix and Sun Microsystems: Deal or No Deal?
datagubbe.se
The story behind Caesar salad
nationalgeographic.com
In a milestone for Manhattan, a pair of coyotes has made Central Park their home
smithsonianmag.com
Vortex (Véhicule Orbital Réutilisable de Transport Et D'Exploration)
dassault-aviation.com
The History of Electronic Music in 476 Tracks (1937–2001)
openculture.com
Robots move Shanghai city block [video]
youtube.com
Show HN: I AI-coded a tower defense game and documented the whole process
github.com
Continue (YC S23) is hiring software engineers in San Francisco
ycombinator.com
Writing a Game Boy Emulator in OCaml
linoscope.github.io
The author seems to be unsure as to how widely the 2500UX was sold; I can confirm first hand that it was a real thing; I obtained parts of one from a dumpster dive at a Canadian university in the early 2000s. Sadly the case was mangled by a friend who really wanted its floppy drive for an SGI Indy we'd found in an earlier haul...
(I still have the 2500's accelerator card. The Indy is intact, boots, and sitting dormant in a cozy heated garage on a farm somewhere. There's also this hilarious story about how I tracked down the machine's original owner and naïvely asked him for help with removing the root password. He was amused and actually did so, though not without throwing a fair amount of shade at the university for poor hardware disposal practices...)