Gooooooood morning, Human beings!!! Hey, this is not a test, this is a tech roundup. Time to rock it from the Delta to the DMZ.
AI, bots and robots
- Neural networks for geophysicists and application to seismic data interpretation
- Learning Without Burnout
- ElegantRL: A Lightweight and Stable Deep Reinforcement Learning Library
- Daves Old Computers – Robotic DVD Loader
- Exploiting machine learning Pickle files
- José Epita Mbomo, a Spanish electrician who sabotaged the Nazis
- AI Can Now Debate with Humans and Sometimes Convince Them, Too
- Freewire: An Experiment with Freely Wired Neural Networks
- New Brunswick monitoring more than 40 cases of unknown neurological disease
- One-Shot Free-View Neural Talking-Head Synthesis for Video Conferencing
- AI and Drug Discovery: Attacking the Right Problems
Blockchain and decentralization
- Bitcoin Is Dead – Tracking all notable Bitcoin skeptics since 2010
- Why Isn’t Bitcoin Banned Everywhere?
- IPFS Local Offline Collaboration Sig
- GeForce RTX 3060 Ethereum Mining Restrictions Have Been Broken
- CryptoTask – a 0% fee freelance platform powered by blockchain
- Indian government is planning outright ban on cryptocurrency
- Clio: A functional, distributed programming language that compiles to JavaScript
- Visa Plans to Enable Bitcoin Payments at 70M Merchants
- Bitcoins, Blockchains, and Botnets
- CFTC Orders Coinbase Inc. To Pay $6.5M Penalty
- Bitcoin Blackhole Effect
Woman computer scientist of the week
Gail Ann Williams has been the director of The WELL since 1998. She graduated from the University of California, Berkeley in the 1970s and got involved in political theater as both a creative and management member of the Plutonium Players troupe. She was a principal in their long-touring satirical show spoofing anti-feminist politics, Ladies Against Women, throughout the years of the Ronald Reagan presidency.
Cloud and architecture
- The Laws of Durability
- WhatsApp CEO on the controversy surrounding proposed German communications laws
- Quantum Mischief Rewrites the Laws of Cause and Effect
- Legislative Performance Futures – Incentivize Good Laws by Monetizing the Future
- In Landmark Privacy Law, California Passes Regulation Banning “Dark Patterns”
- The architects who rebuilt Jojutla after a devastating earthquake
- Cloud GPUs for Deep Learning – At 1/3 the Cost of AWS/GCP
- Google Cloud Networking reporting issues
- Double bongcloud: why grandmasters are playing the worst move in chess
- Open Application Model – An open standard for defining cloud native apps
- Great SaaS Demos Enabled by DevOps Tools
Development and languages
- Piracy, Overcoming Gravity, and the Digital Edition
- A Programming Murder Mystery in Ruby
- Refund of pre-installed Windows: Lenovo must pay 20k euros in damages
- GitHub no longer supports this web browser
- JavaScript from 2001 on India’s largest private bank site
- Performance comparison: counting words in Python, Go, C++, C, Awk, Forth, Rust
- Highlights from Git 2.31
- Our journey from a Python monolith to a managed platform
- GitHub Has a Permission Problem
- New SWAT drone smashes windows, opens doors, and negotiates with suspects
- Interfaces and Protocols in Python
- Internet Archive ‘Legitimately Useful’ for Lending and Preservation
- Static website analytics with no JavaScript using GoAccess
- Ghost Kernel
- Correct Git commits with git-autofixup
- JamRTC – WebRTC for Live Musicians
- FreeBSD kernel-mode WireGuard moves forward out-of-tree
- The kernel has 6 separate ASN.1 parsers
- Drovio – Remote pair programming tool
- The Python Package Cache
Quote of the week
When you want to do something differently from the rest of the world, it’s a good idea to look into whether the rest of the world knows something you don’t.
Enterprises
- Tesla says “Full Self-Driving” software doesn’t make cars autonomous
- Tweeting “Memphis” autolocks your Twitter account
- Stripe valuation soars to $95bn after latest fundraising
- Google Photos circumvents iOS 14 photos privacy features
- How Amazon Crushes Unions
- Google finally revealed how much personal data they collect in Chrome
- Google Play store bans polyamory dating app
- If Tesla Is the Apple of Electric Vehicles, Volkswagen Bets It Can Be Samsung
- Amazon Care to launch across U.S. this summer, offering access to medical care
- Tesla on autopilot crashes into stopped Michigan police car
- Twitter: Imperfect by Design
- New Intel “backdoor” – undocumented x86 instruction to alter microcode
- Amazon S3 Object Lambda
Other news
- A Medieval Woman Wore ‘Birthing Girdle’ to Protect Herself During Labor
- Woman created deepfake videos to force rivals off daughter’s cheerleading squad
- Out of the Top Fifty Games on Steam, 70% Work on Linux
- Multigenerational LRU: more performant, versatile, straightforward than Linux’s
- Kotlin Compiler Crash Course
- JGen – Text-based journal generator
- Shrink, Reduce, and Implode: The Legacy Zip Compression Methods
- Blender website under maintenance due to hacking attempt
- WeLeakInfo Leaked Customer Payment Info
- Learn How to Tie Knots
- Immutable Linux desktop with OpenSUSE and Snaps
- Buildroot – Making Embedded Linux Easy
- Phrack Magazine
- Juxting – A Fountain of Ideas
- Cricut Wants Users to Pay for Unlimited Use of Cutting Machines They Already Own
- Startup School’s “Aspiring Founders” track is reopening as a continuous course
- Rockstar pays $10k to modder who fixed GTA Online loading times
- Wikipedia Is Finally Asking Big Tech to Pay Up
- I self-learned to code at 30
- The Adventurous Seafaring Women of the Age of Sail, in Their Own Words
- Deducing This
- What’s under the hood of a quantum computer?
- Learnlatex.org: A place to learn LaTeX online
- Arch Linux partners with Nitrokey to equip its staff with USB keys
- The Pastry A.I. That Learned to Fight Cancer
- “Expert” hackers used 11 zerodays to infect Windows, iOS, and Android users
- In a Phase III trial, Proxalutamide reduced mortality of Covid patients
- Hacker’s Guide to Numerical Analysis
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