November 2015 Archive
12781.
Chinese Tinder clone security holes (larrysalibra.com)
12782.
Microsoft open sources its machine learning toolkit (thestack.com)
12783.
New derivation of pi links quantum physics and pure math (eurekalert.org)
12784.
Mastering Pandas (amazon.com)
12785.
How to Install Elasticsearch on Ubuntu 14.04 (hostpresto.com)
12786.
NPM Trends (farhadi.2015.nodeknockout.com)
12787.
Cancer myths about antioxidant supplements need to die (arstechnica.com)
12788.
Where Disruptive Innovation Came From (hbr.org)
12789.
A first look at RDS Aurora (percona.com)
12790.
Play or die: the musical chairs of tech (techinasia.com)
12791.
Stay at a UNESCO world heritage temple in Kyoto, Japan for less than any hotel (japancheapo.com)
12792.
Introducing Smart Reply in Inbox by Gmail (gmailblog.blogspot.com)
12793.
Isomorphic boilerplate for React written in ES2015 for Node and the browser (github.com)
12794.
Japan to strengthen copyright protections in light of TPP (japantimes.co.jp)
12795.
Slock.it: Locks controlled by Ethereum smart contracts (slock.it)
12796.
Acknowledging Privilege (medium.com)
12797.
ActorDB: Distributed SQL database with linear scalability (actordb.com)
12798.
BitTorrent Usage Doesn't Equal Piracy, Cox Tells Court (torrentfreak.com)
12799.
Greb: Grab meaning from web, a dictionary cli(python) (github.com)
12800.
Did this Twitter bot predict the Paris shootings 2 days before they happened? (skeptics.stackexchange.com)
12801.
WTF Visualizations (viz.wtf)
12802.
How a Radical Redesign Can Solve Bitcoin's Scaling Issues (bitcoinmagazine.com)
12803.
African Tech Round-Up: The Mark Kaigwa, Thebe Ikalafeng and Rebecca Enonchong EP (soundcloud.com)
12804.
Bayesian or Frequentist, Which Are You? (videolectures.net)
12805.
The long, slow, SaaS ramp of death (thebln.com)
12806.
Deployment Contracts (violentlymild.com)
12807.
Get More Innovative by Rethinking the Way You Think (hbr.org)
12808.
Why I Won’t Use TurnItIn to Check My PhD Thesis (medium.com)
12809.
Paris attacks: The Economist readers' comments (economist.com)
12810.
Why I'm the Best Programmer in the World* (blog.codinghorror.com)