2023 Heineken Las Vegas Grand Prix Race Recap - ESPN (UK)
Explore GPU advancements in M3 and A17 Pro - Tech Talks - Videos - Apple Developer
AI outperforms conventional weather forecasting for the first time: Google study | Ars Technica
7 Days of Pie: A full serving of facts
How the Dolphins’ Mike McDaniel keeps things authentic - ESPN
Tom Brady bemoans NFL play, says ‘there’s a lot of mediocrity’ - ESPN
The Rules for Holiday Spending This Year (No. 1: Wait ’Til December) - WSJ
Why Americans Hate a Good Economy - The Atlantic
There Is No Good Way to Travel Anywhere in America - The Atlantic
Pierre de Fermat’s Link to a High School Student’s Prime Math Proof | Quanta Magazine
Butterball Helpline Helpline - McSweeney’s Internet Tendency — Required reading
Behind the Tendency Classics: Alysia Gray Painter’s “Butterball Help-Line Help-Line” | Patreon
‘A Charlie Brown Thanksgiving’ marks its 50th anniversary — how has it held up? : NPR
Cranberry Martinis Recipe - NYT Cooking — My specialty. I have mastered the preparation of this drink.
Apps that I got on Black Friday
Who spends more of their income on housing in the US? - USAFacts
What is this year’s Social Security cost of living increase? - USAFacts — 3.2%
Inside the Lego’s Quest for the Next Hit Toy Set: Four Years, 30,000 Kids and Countless Bricks - WSJ
Lego has improbably become the world’s biggest toy company by selling the same product for 70 years. It does this by constantly coming up with new themes for its little plastic bricks. Lately many of Lego’s biggest moneymakers have been sets based on Harry Potter, Star Wars and other big entertainment brands—but the company has to share revenues with the owners of those franchises. Now it wants to come up with a new brand that it controls, a labor-intensive and risky undertaking. Can it make something as beloved as Hermione Granger, Luke Skywalker or Thor?
Time to fire up the Christmas playlists.