Doing well in your courses: Andrej's advice for success (2013)
cs.stanford.edu
Compare Single Board Computers
sbc.compare
Dosbian: Boot to DOSBox on Raspberry Pi
cmaiolino.wordpress.com
GNU Octave Meets JupyterLite: Compute Anywhere, Anytime
blog.jupyter.org
What Unix pipelines got right and how we can do better
programmingsimplicity.substack.com
The Trinary Dream Endures
robinsloan.com
The Spilhaus Projection: A world map according to fish
southernwoodenboatsailing.com
We Need Arabic Language Models
natureasia.com
Show HN: Duck-UI – Browser-Based SQL IDE for DuckDB
demo.duckui.com
The macOS LC_COLLATE hunt: Or why does sort order differently on macOS and Linux (2020)
blog.zhimingwang.org
Infisical (YC W23) Is Hiring Full Stack Engineers
ycombinator.com
Show HN: Pyversity – Fast Result Diversification for Retrieval and RAG
github.com
RFCs: Blueprints of the Internet
ackreq.github.io
Could the XZ backdoor been detected with better Git/Deb packaging practices?
optimizedbyotto.com
How to Assemble an Electric Heating Element from Scratch
solar.lowtechmagazine.com
Show HN: Notepad.exe – macOS editor for Swift and Python (now Linux runtime)
notepadexe.com
Airliner hit by possible space debris
avbrief.com
The case for the return of fine-tuning
welovesota.com
I wish SSDs gave you CPU performance style metrics about their activity
utcc.utoronto.ca
US Government Uptime Monitor
usa-status.com
The Spherical Cows of Programming
programmingsimplicity.substack.com
Xubuntu.org Might Be Compromised
old.reddit.com
> The reason, they believe, is that as warm air rises over the sea, it draws moisture away from the land, yielding heavier downpours.
Without reading the original article, which probably goes into more detail, I find this very speculative and I'm not convinced there is more going on than correlation. If anything the causality is more plausible the other way round: When it doesn't rain over land, pollution spikes.