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241.
Breaking Enigma with Index of Coincidence on a Commodore 64 (news.ycombinator.com)
242.
Fantastical can now trigger alarms for events and tasks (9to5mac.com)
243.
Smarter Financial Decisions Start with Better Stock Market Knowledge (feeds.feedburner.com)
244.
AstraZeneca Confident Rare-Disease Drug Can Hit Target After Mixed Study Results (feeds.content.dowjones.io)
245.
Biogen to Acquire Apellis Pharmaceuticals for $5.6 Billion (feeds.content.dowjones.io)
246.
You Know How Scientists Keep Finding Microplastics Literally Everywhere? Well, You’d Never Guess What Their Lab Gloves Are Coated in Straight Out of the Packaging (futurism.com)
247.
AI used in warfare needs a strong ethical framework (feeds.nature.com)
248.
Andy Weir Apologizes After ‘Star Trek’ Comment Backlash (gizmodo.com)
249.
There are more AI health tools than ever—but how well do they work? (technologyreview.com)
250.
An Example of Statistical Investigation of the Text Eugene Onegin – Markov, 1913 [pdf] (news.ycombinator.com)
251.
New Details Add a Bizarre Twist to NASA’s First ISS Medical Evacuation (gizmodo.com)
252.
Mantis Biotech is making ‘digital twins’ of humans to help solve medicine’s data availability problem (techcrunch.com)
253.
Pompeii Study Confirms Roman ‘Wine’ Ritual Previously Known Only From Texts (gizmodo.com)
254.
Pharma Giant Eli Lilly Is Paying $2.75 Billion for Drugs Designed by AI – Here’s What It Gets Them (feeds.feedburner.com)
255.
Do your own writing (news.ycombinator.com)
256.
Australia Turns Into Bright-Red Vision of Hell (futurism.com)
257.
Mathematical methods and human thought in the age of AI (news.ycombinator.com)
258.
KitchenAid redesigned its iconic mixer so you can set an exact speed (theverge.com)
259.
Show HN: The Alphabetical Clock (news.ycombinator.com)
260.
Forget touchscreens: These 3 phones are bringing physical keyboards back (feeds.feedburner.com)
261.
Now is the time for scientific societies to guide global research (feeds.nature.com)
262.
How buildings and cities can be aligned with life (feeds.nature.com)
263.
Oscar Reutersvärd (2021) (news.ycombinator.com)
264.
Dammit, Jim, He’s a Doctor *And* an Action Figure! (gizmodo.com)
265.
Full network of clitoral nerves mapped out for first time (news.ycombinator.com)
266.
Tokyo consortium tests placing data centers under railway overpasses — passing trains introduce severe thermal and vibration challenges (tomshardware.com)
267.
Japanese firm develops optical fiber with 4x traffic capacity, could be used for undersea cables — MCF retains the same diameter and works with existing infrastructure (tomshardware.com)
268.
Fiber HDMI cables enable full-bandwidth 8K over runs up to 990 feet (techspot.com)
269.
What Made Bell Labs So Successful? (slashdot.org)
270.
Polygraphs have major flaws. Are there better options? (arstechnica.com)
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