Hackernews posts about 6809
6809 is an 8-bit microprocessor designed by Motorola in the late 1970s, widely used in embedded systems and personal computers during the early days of computing.
- I tracked 609 food additives across 817K products to find awareness gaps (compareadditives.com)
- What happens when even college students can't do math anymore? (www.theatlantic.com)
- The government has no plan for America’s 300 billion pennies (www.theatlantic.com)
- The end of naked locker rooms (www.theatlantic.com)
- Trump's Devastating Plan for Ukraine (www.theatlantic.com)
- RFK Jr.'s Miasma Theory of Health Is Spreading (www.theatlantic.com)
- Pete Hegseth Needs to Go–Now (www.theatlantic.com)
- America's elite colleges have an extra-time-on-tests problem (www.theatlantic.com)
- What if our ancestors didn't feel pain the way we do (www.theatlantic.com)
- Epstein Returns at the Worst Time for Trump (www.theatlantic.com)
- The People Outsourcing Their Thinking to AI – Rise of the LLeMmings (www.theatlantic.com)
- Why Hotel-Room Cancellations Disappeared (www.theatlantic.com)
- Crypto Could Trigger the Next Financial Crisis (www.theatlantic.com)
- America Is Taking the Train (www.theatlantic.com)
- Get Your Kid a Watch (www.theatlantic.com)
- Accommodation Nation: America's colleges have an extra-time-on-tests problem (www.theatlantic.com)
- Bill Gates Said the Quiet Part Out Loud (www.theatlantic.com)
- Unidentified drones breached no-fly zone to target Zelenskyy's arrival (www.thejournal.ie)
- We're Thinking About Young Adulthood All Wrong (www.theatlantic.com)
- The Social Cost of Being a Morning Person (www.theatlantic.com)
- Indian boy, aged 3, becomes youngest rated chess player in history (www.nytimes.com)
- The People Outsourcing Their Thinking to AI (www.theatlantic.com)
- The Social Cost of Being a Morning Person (www.theatlantic.com)
- Crypto Could Trigger the Next Financial Crisis (www.theatlantic.com)
- DeepSeek-v3.2: Pushing the Frontier of Open Large Language Models (cas-bridge.xethub.hf.co)
- Tesla Wants to Build a Robot Army (www.theatlantic.com)