March 2015 Archive
691.
Rationality: From AI to Zombies (intelligence.org)
692.
How a half-million dollar Kickstarter project can crash and burn (medium.com)
693.
How a bad RJ45 termination can ruin a cable (bluejeanscable.com)
694.
NextDoor raises $110M at a $1.1B valuation (mobile.nytimes.com)
695.
You Cannot Have Exactly-Once Delivery (bravenewgeek.com)
696.
Baobab: A JavaScript data tree supporting Om-style cursors, with React mixins (github.com)
697.
Dependencies and vendoring in Go (groups.google.com)
698.
GitHub unveils its Licenses API (lwn.net)
699.
Vast Underground City Found in Turkey May Be One of the World’s Largest (history.com)
700.
Ten million people around the world have no nationality (tracks.unhcr.org)
701.
Cinder (YC W15) – Smart Countertop Grill (gizmodo.com)
702.
Are pointers and arrays equivalent in C? (2009) (eli.thegreenplace.net)
703.
Kimiko Ishizaka and MuseScore Team Release Open Well-Tempered Clavier (libregraphicsworld.org)
704.
Shen: A Sufficiently Advanced Lisp [video] (2014) (youtube.com)
705.
Analog Memory Desk (kcamara.com)
706.
Inside the Mad, Mad World of TripAdvisor (outsideonline.com)
707.
Animated vector map (tangrams.github.io)
708.
Introducing Messenger Platform and Businesses on Messenger (developers.facebook.com)
709.
Inside the Deep Web Drug Lab (medium.com)
710.
Interest in Bitcoin Grows on Wall Street (blogs.wsj.com)
711.
Ask HN: Who wants to be hired? (March 2015)
712.
Death Is Optional: A Conversation with Yuval Noah Harari and Daniel Kahneman (edge.org)
713.
Machines shipping with Windows 10 may see OEMs enforcing Secure Boot (linuxveda.com)
714.
Etsy's Founder, Written Out of History, Is Not Alone (bloomberg.com)
715.
Startups That Launched at Y Combinator Winter 2015 Demo Day 2 (techcrunch.com)
716.
Zigbee light link master key (twitter.com)
717.
Pinterest Raises $367M at $11B valuation (techcrunch.com)
718.
Why This Tech Bubble is Worse Than the Tech Bubble of 2000 (blogmaverick.com)
719.
Opportunistic Encryption for Firefox (bitsup.blogspot.com)
720.
Why Many Smart, Low-Income Students Don't Apply to Elite Schools (npr.org)