Together With  | | | | Meta is reportedly working on humanoid robots that help with chores (3 minute read) Meta is reportedly creating a new team within its Reality Labs hardware division that will build robot hardware. The company's long-term goal is to create the platform that the industry uses. It will make the underlying sensors, AI, and software for other companies to put inside their hardware. The core technologies that Meta has invested in and built across Reality Labs and AI are complementary to the development of the advancements needed for robotics. | Reddit CEO Says Paywalls Are Coming Soon (2 minute read) Reddit's CEO Steve Huffman said during a video Ask Me Anything Session recently that the platform is actively testing ways to make some content paid. Reddit is planning to roll out a 'paid subreddit' feature later this year. The paid content model is still a work in progress - there are many issues to work out, such as how paid subreddits will be moderated, as volunteer moderators likely won't want to watch over paid content if they aren't getting paid themselves. It may be possible for Reddit to allow creators to put certain content behind paywalls - lots of creators have their own subreddits, which allow community conversation in a way that comments on Patreon posts don't totally allow for. | | Science & Futuristic Technology | Miniaturized CRISPR Packs a Mighty Gene Editing Punch (5 minute read) One of the biggest issues with CRISPR-Cas9 is that the system is too large, making it difficult to deliver the gene editor. Mammoth Biosciences' NanoCas is a version of the CRISPR-Cas9 system that is roughly one-third the size of the original, allowing the tool to be used for gene therapy inside muscles, the brain, the heart, and other tissues. The team is already exploring the system's potential for targeting brain diseases. The technology could be modified for use in epigenetic or base editing. | The Blue Ghost Lunar Lander Is Now Orbiting the Moon, Taking Dazzling Photographs (4 minute read) NASA's Blue Ghost lander is now orbiting the Moon as it prepares to make a landing on March 2. The lander holds 10 payloads - a list is available in the article. NASA also launched a rover from a Japanese company along with Blue Ghost that will carry five payloads. The rover will land at the Atlas crater in Mare Frigoris and use its equipment to conduct food production experiments, detect radiation, conduct water electrolysis, and collect regolith. | | Programming, Design & Data Science | Sunsetting Create React App (9 minute read) Create React App currently has no active maintainers and there are many existing programs that solve the same problems, so it is being deprecated. It will continue working in maintenance mode. Frameworks like Next.js, React Router, and Expo are recommended for new projects. Links to adoption guides for migrating apps from Create React App to Next.js, React Router, and Expo are available in the article. | From web developer to database developer in 10 years (4 minute read) This article details Phil Eaton's journey from a web developer to a database developer and the decisions made along the way. Eaton was a web developer from 2014 to 2012 and a hands-on engineering manager from 2017 to 2021. He tried to start a company in 2021 but left in 2023 to be a co-founder at TigerBeetle. This experience eventually led to him becoming a database developer. | | The Inside Story of How Altman and Musk Went From Friends to Bitter Enemies (16 minute read) Sam Altman and Elon Musk co-founded OpenAI in 2015. Their relationship soured in 2018, and Musk left after a power struggle. The rivalry intensified when Musk launched his own AI startup, xAI, following the release of ChatGPT. Musk recently followed the Stargate unveiling by making a hostile $97.4 billion bid for the assets of the nonprofit that controls OpenAI. This article looks at Altman and Musk's rivalry through conversations with more than a dozen people familiar with their relationship over the years. | Inside Amazon's Messy Push to Bring Everyone Back to the Office (8 minute read) Amazon told hundreds of thousands of workers to come back to the office full-time, but it didn't have enough desks to go around. Some employees don't have any teammates in the same location, so they are fighting other employees for private rooms to make video calls. This article looks at how Amazon's policy for employees to return to the office or find somewhere else to work has turned out. The company is short on desks and parking and employees report that the initiative hasn't helped them become more collaborative. | TLDR is hiring curators for our new TLDR Data newsletter (Fully Remote, $100/hr) TLDR is hiring part time curators to launch our TLDR Data newsletter.The ideal candidate would have deep experience working directly with data warehouses, data pipelines, data lakes, and other modern cloud infrastructure. Time commitment is ~2-3 hours/week paid at a rate of $100/hr. To apply please send your LinkedIn or resume to jobs@tldr.tech along with a couple sentences on why you'd be a good fit! | | Congrats to Carl August Dauer for referring 5 friends to TLDR. Thanks for helping us spread the word! π Love TLDR? 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