You got it! By approximate category and in no particular order:
## MISCELLANEOUS
- [Low Tech Magazine](https://solar.lowtechmagazine.com), a solar-powered website showcasing the amazing low-tech things you can do with a little ingenuity,
So for reference, this geohot is George Hotz who has a company Tiny Corp [0] in the space. Among a long list of things, he had a moment in the spotlight recently for a long rant [1] where he "gave up on AMD" because their drivers sucked more than he expected. The situation is reasonably complex - AMD have some programmers working on ROCm who seemed to be operating at standard fare when that is really not what AMD needs right now (I personally, suspect there is/was a PM in a key position who didn't "get it", although I am not sure what it is either). As far as I know it got the attention of Lisa Su.
I'm cheering him on, even though his complaints were a little melodramatic. My experience is the driver technically supports everything I could possibly want. The problem is if I spend an evening trying to do anything with OpenCL or ROCm the kernel hard-locks and I go to bed early. If the problem inside is what it looks like from the outside (repeating myself, a key manager somewhere just doesn't get the space) they really need some pressure from grumpy customers like George to realign their software development process.
That context might be related to this particular case. I see a suspicious folder called "crash" in this repo.
> It makes me think that the Peter Watts' Blindsight idea, where our "self" being a waste of brainpower narrating and explaining (perhaps erroneously) what the true decision maker was doing as if the self was the entity responsible ... is more or less correct.
I'd like to know if there's a name for that.
It thinks therefore I am.
It’s a recurring theme in the books written by Scott Bakker.
If you're interested in learning more about F#, I strongly suggest joining the F# Foundation Slack. Unfortunately they make it surprisingly difficult to join, you have to create an account on the F# Software Foundation website (https://fsharp.nationbuilder.com/forms/user_sessions/new) and then "join" the foundation (http://foundation.fsharp.org/join ; you'll see the option to join once you have an account).
There's a large community of very helpful people willing to answer questions.
Some software is promoted on its merits and some software exists just "because it's GNU" (e.g. Hurd, Guile, Guix, gNewSense, GnuTLS, Shishi, GNUstep, Gnash, etc.). It's pretty safe to ignore the latter kind.
## MISCELLANEOUS
- [Low Tech Magazine](https://solar.lowtechmagazine.com), a solar-powered website showcasing the amazing low-tech things you can do with a little ingenuity,
- [Stephen Wolfram's Blog](https://writings.stephenwolfram.com) on math, compsci, and everything else,
- [Cool Macrophotography](https://www.barrywebbimages.co.uk/Images/Macro/Slime-Moulds-...) for amazing pictures of tiny things (WARNING: Time Sink!),
## COMPUTER SCIENCE
- [While-True-Do](https://blog.while-true-do.io) has lots of stuff on Linux administration and self-hosting,
- [Backend Banter](https://www.backendbanter.fm) for a great podcast on backend development,
- [Two Wrongs](https://two-wrongs.com) for statistics and functional programming,
- [Math ∩ Programming](https://www.jeremykun.com/) where math and programming intersect! Written by a Googler...
- [Paul Bourke's site](https://paulbourke.net/) where you can get happily lost exploring old pages on every topic CS touches,
- [Jason Punyon's blog](https://jasonpunyon.com) for some fun algorithms and things,
- [Yossi Kreinin's blog](https://yosefk.com/blog) for C, Python, and plenty of non-technical topics,
- [Adrian Sampson's academic blog](https://www.cs.cornell.edu/~asampson/blog) for an academic's perspective,
- [Cool polyhedra viewer project](https://georgehart.com/virtual-polyhedra/vp.html) if you like geometry,
- [Another academic blog on CS](https://11011110.github.io/blog) from a prof at UCal Irvine,
- [A Linux & Rust blog](https://harald.hoyer.xyz) which has a lot of older content, but isn't very active now,
- [Matt Palmer's blog](https://hezmatt.org/~mpalmer/blog) is pretty neat. More varied CS topics...
- [Austin Henley's blog](https://austinhenley.com/blog.html) stays pretty active, and it's a former MS researcher writing it,
- [Jack Vanlightly's blog](https://jack-vanlightly.com/) on system architecture and data processing,
- [Computational Complexity blog](https://blog.computationalcomplexity.org) written jointly by academics,
- [Matt Might's blog](https://matt.might.net/articles) which covers everything related to CS and academia,
- [Dr. Brian Callahan's blog](https://briancallahan.net/blog/archive.html) mostly dealing with UNIX and C compilation,
- [The Dictionary of Data Structures & Algorithms](https://xlinux.nist.gov/dads) from NIST (very old website),
- [Red Tomato's blog](https://tech.aufomm.com) on Linux server administration,
## ART & TYPOGRAPHY
- [Typographica](https://typographica.org) for typeface design news (check out their creator's other projects as well...)
- [Minimal Gallery](https://minimal.gallery) showcases great user-submitted minimal web designs,
- [Letterform Archive](https://letterformarchive.org) in San Francisco, for collections and tidbits on pieces of typographic history.
That's about it for now...