Read a tech roundup with this week’s news that our powerful bot has chosen: blockchain, AI, development, corporates and more.
Gooooooood morning, Humans!!! 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
Blockchain and decentralization
Woman computer scientist of the week
Teresa K. Attwood is a Professor of Bioinformatics in the School of Computer Science and School of Biological Sciences at the University of Manchester and a visiting fellow at the European Bioinformatics Institute (EMBL-EBI). She held a Royal Society University Research Fellowship at University College London (UCL) from 1993 to 1999 and at the University of Manchester from 1999 to 2002.
Cloud and architecture
- The SaaS Org Chart
- Terracotta: Serverless GeoTiff Tile Server
- CDN experiment: Free CDN shockingly faster than Amazon CloudFront in many cases
- IBM Z/OS v2.5, Next-Gen Operating System Designed for Hybrid Cloud and AI
IBM announced IBM z/OS V2.5, the next-generation operating system (OS) for IBM Z, designed to accelerate client adoption of hybrid cloud and AI and drive application modernization projects.
- Naval Architecture
Interactive article explaining how ships float and maintain their stability.
- SSD belonging to Euro-cloud Scaleway was stolen,then turned up on YouTube
- Full-Stack React SaaS Boilerplate with Auth and Payment
- The Baked Data architectural pattern
- “We do not plan to publish the AWS CLI project to PyPI at this time”
- AWS Support for Internet Explorer 11 Is Ending
If you are using Internet Explorer 11 (IE 11) to access the AWS Management Console, web-based services such as Amazon Chime or Amazon Honeycode, or other parts of the AWS web site (AWS Documentation, AWS Marketing, AWS Marketplace, or AWS Support), it is time to upgrade to a more modern & secure browser such as […]
- Google Cloud offers a model for fixing Google’s product-killing reputation
- The Future of Work at Cloudflare
Development and languages
- Windows Command-Line Obfuscation
- How JavaScript works: an overview of the engine, the runtime, and the call stack
As JavaScript is getting more and more popular, teams are leveraging its support on many levels in their stack – front-end, back-end…
- Registry Explorer: Replacement for the Windows Built-In Regedit.exe Tool
- Windows Sysinternals: advanced system utilities and technical information
- Types versus sets in math and programming languages
- Jello: Print “jello ” in every programming language
- Signal on Android: Images sent to wrong contacts
I have searched open and closed issues for duplicates I am submitting a bug report for existing functionality that does not work as intended I have read https://github.com/signalapp/Signal-Android/…
- Finding Windows HANDLE leaks, in Chromium and others
- Taking Months to Bits: A calendrical journey into low-level programming
- Windows Defender blocks qBittorrent
Please provide the following information qBittorrent version and Operating System 4.3.3, Windows 10 20H2, What is the problem Windows Security / Virus & threat protection – blocks / removes exi…
- A Unix-style personal search engine and web crawler for your digital footprint
A Unix-style personal search engine and web crawler for your digital footprint. – GitHub – amirgamil/apollo: A Unix-style personal search engine and web crawler for your digital footprint.
- Reprogramming a Sennheiser Microphone
- Text2Code: Converts English queries into Python code
- Functional Programming in OCaml
- Handling 100 Requests per Second with Python and Django
- Windows 96
MIKESOFT presents you the latest version of Windows, WINDOWS 96.
- DigitalOcean Down?
- Drum Synthesis in JavaScript
- Finding a kernel regression in half an hour with git bisect run
The git bisect command helps you identify the first commit in a range that broke something. You give it a good commit and a bad one, and it will do a binary search between the two to find the first bad commit. At each step, you say either git bisect …
- Command line tools for productive programmers
Lately, I’ve been doing a lot more things at the command line. I’m not a hard-core terminal guy – I use VSCode more than Vim – but I’m always surpr…
- The Array Cast: A podcast about the array programming languages
- A Large-Scale Security-Oriented Static Analysis of Python Packages in PyPI
Different security issues are a common problem for open source packages
archived to and delivered through software ecosystems. These often manifest
themselves as software weaknesses that may lead to concrete software
vulnerabilities. This paper examines various security issues in Python packages
with static analysis. The dataset is based on a snapshot of all packages stored
to the Python Package Index (PyPI). In total, over 197 thousand packages and
over 749 thousand security issues are covered. Even under the constraints
imposed by static analysis, (a) the results indicate prevalence of security
issues; at least one issue is present for abou
- What Does Saying That ‘Programming Is Hard’ Say, and About Whom?
- Lunatic is an Erlang-inspired runtime for WebAssembly
- Swift Protocol Oriented Programming and Testing
- Hosting SQLite Databases on GitHub Pages
Quote of the week
It is a painful thing to look at your own trouble and know that you yourself and no one else has made it.
— Sophocles, Ajax
Enterprises
- Hobson’s Browser: How Apple, Facebook and Google broke the mobile browser market
- The Truth Behind the Amazon Mystery Seeds A still life of bags, dirt, and plants
- Amazon Is Creating Company Towns Across the United States
- Tesla will not offer a regular steering wheel on new Model S/X
- 16/30 Google results for PHP tutorials contain SQL injection vulnerabilities
- Tesla AutoPilot – I give up, it’s downright lethal
- Tesla Q2 2021 earnings release – Big profit beat
- Intel’s Process Roadmap to 2025: with 4nm, 3nm, 20A and 18A?
- Intel to build Qualcomm chips, aims to catch foundry rivals by 2025
Intel Corp (INTC.O) said on Monday its factories will start building Qualcomm Inc (QCOM.O) chips and laid out a roadmap to expand its new foundry business to catch rivals such as Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co (2330.TW) and Samsung Electronics Co Ltd (005930.KS) by 2025.
- Tesla second-quarter profits top $1bn even as it struggles to handle demand
- Google launches new vulnerability reward platform
Posted by Jan Keller, Technical Program Manager, Google VRPÂ A little over 10 years ago , we launched our Vulnerability Rewards Program (VR…
- Alphabet Announces Second Quarter 2021 Results
- Microsoft Silently Dropping Emails – A Sad but True Story
From time to time Microsoft decides to block or even silently drop emails that are sent by my selfhosted email server. It’s always a pain and takes a lot of effort to deal with it. This time I decided to…Read more ›
- No, Facebook and Google Are Not Public Utilities
- Techdirt Is Now Without Any Google Ads or Tracking Code
First things first: if you are interested in advertising on Techdirt in a non-intrusive, non-obnoxious way, please contact us. We’d love to work with you on cool, innovative advertising and sponsorship that engages, instead of annoys, our…
- Tesla auto-pilot keeps confusing moon with traffic light then slowing down
- Amazon EC2-Classic Is Retiring
Update (July 29, 2021) – Added link to the Support Automation Workflow document & clarified link to AWS MGN pricing. Also updated the list of recommended instance types to favor those built on AWS Nitro System, and added “Networking” to the title. Let’s go back to the summer of 2006 and the launch of EC2. […]
- Google and Facebook Mandate Vaccines for Employees At U.S. Offices
- The mermaid is taking over Google search in Norway
A weird thing is going on with Google search in Norway right now. Spammers are taking over.
- Duolingo reaches $6.5B valuation on day of IPO
Language learning app Duolingo Inc (DUOL.O) notched a valuation of $6.5 billion after its shares surged nearly 40% in the company’s Nasdaq debut on Wednesday, becoming the latest education technology startup to impress Wall Street.
- Amazon has ruined search and Google is in on it
- How to format text in Twitter using Unicode characters
- Amazon Kindles with 3G will start to lose cellular data access in December
- Hunting a bug in the i40e Intel driver
A few months ago, after finally having received the new disks for our new Ceph cluster, we decided to benchmark them, so we could tune our cluster to get the best performance out of it, but that’s a story for another time.
- Our Tesla Model 3 Hasn’t Delivered Big Savings in Maintenance Costs
- Google Translate pronounces ‘rooster’ in Spanish
- Fire breaks out at Tesla Big Battery
- Amazon Gets Record $888M EU Fine over Data Violations
- Tesla Megapack Caught Fire at Victorian Big Battery Site in Australia
- 1 out of every 153 American workers is an Amazon employee
- Twitter’s first algorithmic bias bounty challenge
As part of this year’s DEFCON AI Village, we’re trying something radical by introducing the industry’s first algorithmic bias bounty competition.
- 300 Megawatt Tesla battery catches fire
- Better Business Intelligence in Elixir with Livebook
- PaperDelivery – fetch articles from your Twitter feed
Other news
- I Hacked My Standing Desk with a Raspberry Pi
- A Linux distro with a focus on simplicity and the concept of less is more
- Hacking Is the Opposite of Marketing
- Reimagined toilets at a South Korea university transform human waste into biogas
- PinePhone – Open Source Smart Phone Supported by Major Linux Phone Projects
- Fluxsort: A stable adaptive partitioning comparison sort
A stable adaptive branchless partitioning comparison sort. – GitHub – scandum/fluxsort: A stable adaptive branchless partitioning comparison sort.
- Ad men sacked to improve gender pay gap win sex discrimination claim
- Digitize MiniDV Tapes with Linux
- Debian GNU/Linux running bare metal on the Apple M1 with a mainline kernel
- Tether executives said to face criminal probe into bank fraud
- Reducing CO2 emissions by targeting the world’s hyper-polluting power plants
- Citizen pays New Yorkers $25 an hour to livestream crime scenes
- Hastening Linux process cleanup with process_mrelease
One of the fundamental invariants of computing is that, regardless of how
much memory is installed in a system, it is never enough. This is
especially true of systems with tight performance constraints, where every
page of memory is allocated and in use, making it difficult to find
more when it is badly needed. One way to make more memory
available is to kill one or more processes, freeing their resources for
other users. But that often does not work as quickly or reliably as users
would like. In an attempt to improve the situation, Suren Baghdasaryan has
proposed
the addition of a system call named process_mrelease().
- Lessons learned from 15 years of SumatraPDF, an open source Windows app
- Fractons, the ‘weirdest’ matter, could yield quantum clues
- Compilers as Teachers
- Dimensionality reduction in neural data analysis
- iPad app to help you learn computational science by tinkering with code
- Brain imaging before and after Covid-19 in UK Biobank
- Blogger has bad UX and it annoys me
- Invasive ad targeting is bad for journalism and other high-quality publishers
The lie from ad tech is that there’s no such thing as a premium publisher and all ad views are basically the same.
- Hacker downloads close to 300k personal ID photos from Estonian gov database
- Undetectable quantum computation and communication for alien civilizations
We show that free-space diffraction of photons distributes highly useful
entanglement: the receivers of the propagated modes can do a distributed
quantum computation using only linear optics and photon counting. The
distributed computation requires classical communication between receivers,
however, similar to standard measurement-based computation, that communication
is of purely random outcomes and so can be indistinguishable from noise. The
speculation in the title arises from the further observation that the natural
way for a circumspect civilization to hide their photonic entanglement
distribution is to use the thermal light already bein
- So you want to self-publish books and courses on programming
- Common UI/UX mistakes devs make
- Platform teaches nonexperts to use machine learning
- Tech CEO Says Workers Get Too Much Pay and Benefits
- Strict memcpy() bounds checking for the Linux kernel
- Murray’s jailing is latest move in a battle to snuff out independent journalism
- Observation of Time-Crystalline Eigenstate Order on a Quantum Processor
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