- 474Train Your Own LLM from Scratch (github.com)
- 17Mojo Language (mojolang.org)
- 211Formatting a 25M-line codebase overnight (stripe.dev)
- 9I've Banned Query Strings (chrismorgan.info)
- 231Batteries Not Included, or Required, for These Smart Home Sensors (coe.gatech.edu)
- 12Show HN: NanoCorp – Create autonomous companies run by AI (nanocorp.so)
- 3CA, NV and AZ announce temporary plan to save water from the Colorado River (apnews.com)
- 21Meta is dying. It's about time (nytimes.com)
- 22Internet Archive Switzerland: Expanding a Global Mission to Preserve Knowledge (blog.archive.org)
- 235Telus Uses AI to Alter Call-Agent Accents (letsdatascience.com)
- 194Let's talk about LLMs (b-list.org)
- 19Copyfail2 (github.com)
- 6Eisenstein– exact hexagonal arithmetic for Rust (zero drift after 10k rotations) (superinstance.ai)
- 4Elasticsearch's BBQ vs. TurboQuant: 10–40× faster on CPU and lower ranking noise (elastic.co)
- 393IBM didn't want Microsoft to use the Tab key to move between dialog fields (devblogs.microsoft.com)
- 22Why Don't Lowercase Letters Come Right After Uppercase Letters in ASCII? (tylerhillery.com)
- 520I am worried about Bun (wwj.dev)
- 640Microsoft Edge stores all passwords in memory in clear text, even when unused (twitter.com)
- 6TLA+ Caught a Silent Data Divergence Bug in Postgres's pg_rewind (multigres.com)
- 22The FCC Wants Your ID Before You Get a Phone Number (reclaimthenet.org)
- 5Hope: A post-transformer architecture for general intelligence at low compute (blankline.org)
- 3America's A.I. Is Futuristic. China Is Just Making It Work (nytimes.com)
- 6Do We Think Too Much About the Future? (newyorker.com)
- 445Async Rust never left the MVP state (tweedegolf.nl)
- 25The Traveling Salesdog Problem (wespiser.com)
- 78Google tools for customizing searches (cardcatalogforlife.substack.com)
- 24Notes on the xAI/Anthropic data center deal (simonwillison.net)
- 17ASML to invest $1.5B in Mistral at over $11B valuation (calcalistech.com)
- 280I'm scared about biological computing (kuber.studio)
- 71I completed 100 Days of Java over 5 years and mapped the journey as a graph (mohibulsblog.netlify.app)