May 2016 Archive
4951.
Nanocounter: FPGA Frequency Counter with Android UI (andybrown.me.uk)
4952.
Google Keyboard Gets a Huge Update with One-Handed Mode, New Gestures, and More (androidpolice.com)
4953.
Meetings with Satoshi (bbc.co.uk)
4954.
Elon Musk Says Tesla’s Bioweapon Defense Mode ‘is Real’ (killtheboredom.co)
4955.
A Friendly Introduction to Cross-Entropy Loss (rdipietro.github.io)
4956.
Protocols in ClojureScript (blog.altometrics.com)
4957.
Beyond ClojureScript: Elm (martintrojer.github.io)
4958.
I'm a sixth grader in New York City, and I sell strong, secure passwords (dicewarepasswords.com)
4959.
Postgres 9.5 General Availability – Heroku (blog.heroku.com)
4960.
Drone footage of new Apple campus (youtube.com)
4961.
Mercurial 3.7 and 3.8: performance all the way (mathiasdm.com)
4962.
An elementary treatment of the Feynman sprinkler (fermatslibrary.com)
4963.
Is the Tech Bubble Popping? Ping Pong Offers an Answer (wsj.com)
4964.
How to Pick Music for People on LSD, from a Scientist Whose Job That Is (motherboard.vice.com)
4965.
G'Day HN Learn JavaScript for free (100% off until Fri) (classes.coursebirdie.com)
4966.
Remote Code Execution vulnerability in ImageMagick (medium.com)
4967.
Women in Tech Band Together to Track Diversity, After Hours (nytimes.com)
4968.
Splainer: The Elasticsearch Relevance Sandbox That Tells You Why (opensourceconnections.com)
4969.
ImageMagick Is on Fire – CVE-2016–3714 (medium.com)
4970.
The mind behind Linux (youtube.com)
4971.
The Bug in the Physical Building (two-wrongs.com)
4972.
TTIP expected to fail after US demands revealed in unprecedented leak (arstechnica.co.uk)
4973.
Tempi– an open real-time beat detection library for Swift (github.com)
4974.
Pdml2flow: Aggregates wireshark pdml to flows (github.com)
4975.
Google is bringing HTTPS to all blogspot domain blogs (security.googleblog.com)
4976.
Cracking the front-end interview (medium.com)
4977.
Everything as a Service (stratechery.com)
4978.
Consensus 2016: Ethereum Won the “Most Significant Tech Achievement” Award (twitter.com)
4979.
Twilio introduces end-to-end encryption for developers. Are we there yet? (techcrunch.com)
4980.
EDA is dead. What comes next is exciting (medium.com)