August 2016 Archive
12451.
20 Questions for the Presidential Candidates (sciencedebate.org)
12452.
Terrible Clients explained with pirates (toggl.com)
12453.
The “buy” button should always work (ilyabirman.net)
12454.
The Rise and Fall of Quicksand (2010) (slate.com)
12455.
Better User-Experience to the Cloud Deployment (triplet.fi)
12456.
Phoenix Channels vs. Rails Action Cable (dockyard.com)
12457.
360° backyard swing (youtube.com)
12458.
'Millions' of Volkswagen cars can be unlocked via hack (bbc.co.uk)
12459.
All brawn, little brains: EPFL students' table-football robot (actu.epfl.ch)
12460.
TagTime: Stochastic Time Tracking for Space Cadets (2011) (messymatters.com)
12461.
Ziltag: Web Plugin That Turns Images into Conversation (stacktips.com)
12462.
The Joy of Cryptography (web.engr.oregonstate.edu)
12463.
A Collaborative music listening and chat app. Requires Spotify Premium (trymusica.com)
12464.
Phonograph.js: Tolerable mobile web audio (medium.com)
12465.
How Containers, Microservices and AI Will Lead to the Operatorless Data Center (thenewstack.io)
12466.
Nightwatch.js, Node.js, PHP, Android, Docker, DevOps, and JavaScript Highlights (medium.com)
12467.
Everit-org/json-schema 1.4.0 – with better validation failure reports (github.com)
12468.
The FDA Is Prohibited from Going Germline (science.sciencemag.org)
12469.
Free Laracon US 2016 videos available (streamacon.com)
12470.
I Spent My Summer Tracking Down Government Records About the Red Cross (propublica.org)
12471.
Toward a better screen (news.harvard.edu)
12472.
The ancient athlete whose record stood for 2,000 years (bbc.com)
12473.
We Are Nowhere Close to the Limits of Athletic Performance (nautil.us)
12474.
The State of Vue.js (medium.com)
12475.
New AWS Solution – Transit VPC (aws.amazon.com)
12476.
Evolution, Not Revolution (blog.ncase.me)
12477.
Data Science Weekly Edition #142 (datascienceweekly.org)
12478.
America’s Next Mobile Howitzer Is a Danger to Its Crew (warisboring.com)
12479.
An Introduction to TDD (Test-Driven Development) (spin.atomicobject.com)
12480.
The IBM PC Is Just 35 Years Old (en.wikipedia.org)