Same-day upstream Linux support for Snapdragon 8 Elite Gen 5
qualcomm.com
Replace your boss before they replace you
replaceyourboss.ai
Physicists drive antihydrogen breakthrough at CERN
phys.org
Tell HN: Happy Thanksgiving
Penpot: The Open-Source Figma
github.com
Pakistan says rooftop solar output to exceed grid demand in some hubs next year
reuters.com
Show HN: Runprompt – run .prompt files from the command line
github.com
The Input Stack on Linux: An End-to-End Architecture Overview
venam.net
Inspired by Spider-Man, scientists recreate web-slinging technology
scienceclock.com
The VanDersarl Blériot: a 1911 airplane homebuilt by teenage brothers
historynet.com
Cherry gives up German production and wants to sell core division
heise.de
TPUs vs. GPUs and why Google is positioned to win AI race in the long term
uncoveralpha.com
DeepSeekMath-V2: Towards Self-Verifiable Mathematical Reasoning [pdf]
github.com
Coq: The World's Best Macro Assembler? (2013) [pdf]
nickbenton.name
Show HN: SyncKit – Offline-first sync engine (Rust/WASM and TypeScript)
github.com
The current state of the theory that GPL propagates to AI models
shujisado.org
Ray Marching Soft Shadows in 2D (2020)
rykap.com
> Spiders don’t actually shoot their silk into the air. They make contact with a surface first, attach a strand, then pull and arrange their webs with careful choreography.
Spiders don't shoot their silk into the air when spinning a web. Some spiders, however, migrate by ballooning: they stand upside down, rear ends (and spinnerets) in the air, and send a thread of silk skyward, where it catches the wind or heat currents and lifts the spider toward parts unknown.