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1291.
Perlisisms (news.ycombinator.com)
1292.
Conversations with a six-year-old on functional programming (2018) (news.ycombinator.com)
1293.
One quality will be most in-demand from job-seekers in the AI era, Animoca co-founder Siu says (cnbc.com)
1294.
Apple made marketing gold from the export ban on Power Mac G4 'supercomputer' in 1999, 'for the first time in history a personal computer has been classified as a weapon' — Pentagon banned sales of the 400 MHz G4 in 50 countries when it launched (tomshardware.com)
1295.
Researchers recycle old phones and cluster them into ‘computing platforms’ that operate as a low-cost data center — says processors on modern smartphones deliver higher single-core performance than comparable multicore servers (tomshardware.com)
1296.
Snapmaker launches $150,000 Innovation Fund for open source 3D printing — cash rewards target developers backing the U1 toolchanger across Klipper, OrcaSlicer, and Moonraker ecosystems (tomshardware.com)
1297.
The Birth and Death of JavaScript (2014) (news.ycombinator.com)
1298.
Formal methods and the future of programming (news.ycombinator.com)
1299.
Formal Methods and the Future of Programming (news.ycombinator.com)
1300.
A $200 ChatGPT subscription could cost OpenAI $14,000 if you actually used it to its full potential (techspot.com)
1301.
OpenAI hit with sweeping probe from massive coalition of 42 US state attorneys general just days after reported IPO filing — subpoena targets ChatGPT maker’s ads, data practices, handling of minors, model sycophancy, and safety policies (tomshardware.com)
1302.
How to watch most of the World Cup matches with free trials (theverge.com)
1303.
AI cryptomining network's 320,000 RTX 3090-class GPUs allegedly burn 112 megawatts of power on ‘zero useful AI computation’ — GPU rental costs jump 38%, but Pearl’s cards are doing random matrix math, study claims (tomshardware.com)
1304.
Hardcore SpongeBob speedrunners smudged Xbox optical disks with sweat and grease to exploit 'lag clip' trick — filthy smeared disks cut gameplay times in ultimate pursuit of speed (tomshardware.com)
1305.
The reMarkable Paper Pure made me want to start writing things down again (androidauthority.com)
1306.
The Strait of Hormuz Has Been Closed for 100 Days. Why Aren’t Oil Prices Higher? (wired.com)
1307.
Scientists Horrified as Huge Heatwave Hits Antarctica (futurism.com)
1308.
Google just pushed me one step closer to ditching Google Home for Amazon Alexa (androidauthority.com)
1309.
Your business doesn’t need random acts of AI. Here’s why (feeds.feedburner.com)
1310.
Tribblix: The retro Illumos distribution (news.ycombinator.com)
1311.
Your global strategy is broken if it starts with English (feeds.feedburner.com)
1312.
Pac-Man, but you're the ghost (news.ycombinator.com)
1313.
Today's NYT Connections: Sports Edition Hints and Answers for June 14, #629 (cnet.com)
1314.
Making Claude a Chemist (news.ycombinator.com)
1315.
Image Compression (news.ycombinator.com)
1316.
Huge study hints at risks of switching from tobacco cigarettes to vapes (feeds.nature.com)
1317.
Getting Creative with Perlin Noise Fields (news.ycombinator.com)
1318.
Class of AI Models Hyped as Scarily Powerful Apparently Scared the Government Too Much and Now They’re Disabled (gizmodo.com)
1319.
Reviving an abandoned open-source project: 6 years of Atomic Calendar Revive (news.ycombinator.com)
1320.
Why does paper fold so well? (news.ycombinator.com)
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