- ‘How Democracies Spy on Their Citizens’ by Ronan Farrow for The New Yorker
- ‘A West Coast Mango Quest’ by Christopher Cheung for The Tyee
- ‘The different kinds of notes’ by Baldur Bjarnason
- ‘What It’s Like Here’ by Albert Bruneko for Defector
What I’ve Read This Week (April 11 2022 to April 17 2022)
- ‘NIXI expansion & some thoughts’ by Anurag Bhatia
- ‘The struggle of using native emoji on the web’ by Nolan Lawson
- ‘morgan spector pls break me in half’ by Brandon
- ‘Black market SIM cards turned a Zimbabwean border town into a remote work hub’ by Nyasa Bhobo for Rest of World
- ‘game review: norco’ by prophet_goddess
- ‘billy woods: Aethiopes album review’ by Dean Van Nguyen for Pitchfork
- ‘OnePlus 10 Pro review: There’s not much left of the original OnePlus appeal’ by Ron Amadeo for Ars Technica
What I’ve Read This Week (March 21 2022 to March 27 2022)
- ‘How TrueCaller built a billion-dollar caller ID data empire in India’ by Rachna Khaira for Rest of World
- ‘Apple: Design Macs for Other Types of Professionals’ by Adam Engst for TidBITS
- ‘Be Wary of Liar: The Weird History Behind Elden Ring’s ‘Illusory Walls’’ by Patrick Klepek for Waypoint
- ‘Technical Solutions Poorly Solve Social Problems’ by Xe
What I’ve Read This Week (March 7 2022 to March 13 2022)
- ‘Delivery apps’ obsession with star ratings is ruining lives’ by Max Kim for Rest of World
- ‘Fraud Is Flourishing on Zelle. The Banks Say It’s Not Their Problem.’ by Stacy Cowley and Lananh Nguyen for The New York Times
- ‘Have We Been Thinking About Burnout All Wrong?’ by Eve Ettinger for Bustle
- ‘Steam Deck: The comprehensive Ars Technica review’ by Sam Machkovech for Ars Technica
- ‘On the Origin of the iPhone’ by John Gruber
What I’ve Read This Week (February 28 2022 to March 6 2022)
- ‘It’s Your Friends Who Break Your Heart’ by Jennifer Senior for The Atlantic
- ‘Miscellanea: Understanding the War in Ukraine’ by Bret Devereaux
- ‘David Boggs, Co-Inventor of Ethernet, Dies at 71’ by Cade Metz for The New York Times
- ‘Here’s what actually happens to all your online shopping returns’ by Meaghan Tobin, Wency Chen and Abubakar Idris for Rest of World
- ‘One Bit to the Left – An IPv6 Success Story’ by Ewan Mackie for RIPE Labs
- ‘Venus and Serena Williams on Their Own Terms’ by Tressie McMillan Cottom for Harper’s Bazaar
- ‘The rise of prestige Chinese games’ by Khee Hoon Chan for Polygon
- ‘Babylon’s Fall review: a live disservice’ by Ed Thorn for Rock Paper Shotgun