September 2016 Archive
12271.
Humans are losing the battle against Kardashian-loving algorithms (qz.com)
12272.
SpaceX explosion: Elon Musk seeks crowdsourcing for troubleshooting? (csmonitor.com)
12273.
The Six Dumbest Ideas in Computer Security (2005) (ranum.com)
12274.
Bridge to nowhere shows China's failed efforts to engage North Korea (reuters.com)
12275.
The American Scholar: Writing English as a Second Language (2009) (theamericanscholar.org)
12276.
A react native popup dialog (github.com)
12277.
Here’s what the internet looked like in the hours after 9/11 (timeline.com)
12278.
EU to Get Tough on Chat Apps in Win for Telecoms (wsj.com)
12279.
Does Apple have the Courage to push the web? (medium.com)
12280.
Kairos is a very dynamic JavaScript time calculator for Node and browser (rodrigogs.github.io)
12281.
Without Star Trek, There Would Be No SpaceX or Blue Origin (arstechnica.com)
12282.
Generics in C11 (2012) (robertgamble.net)
12283.
So what’s our excuse for toxic founders? (pando.com)
12284.
Reasons why you can't use GNU/Linux dismissed (lpi.org)
12285.
TheFamily Papers (salon.thefamily.co)
12286.
JDK9 still in trouble (mail.openjdk.java.net)
12287.
Gretchen Carlson's former Fox colleagues say they regret not believing her (vox.com)
12288.
Naval Academy to name cyber center for 'mother of computing' (capitalgazette.com)
12289.
BMW bosses to skip Paris show to thrash out electric car strategy (reuters.com)
12290.
Risk Farmers (npr.org)
12291.
Sailfish OS update Aurajoki now available for all (blog.jolla.com)
12292.
Collaboration better than competition? (nytimes.com)
12293.
GNU texinfo 6.3 (lists.gnu.org)
12294.
Ash Trees Could Disappear (news.nationalgeographic.com)
12295.
Concepts and Applications of Inferential Statistics (vassarstats.net)
12296.
Brickyard Blues (m.chicagoreader.com)
12297.
Computers, Legos, Evolution and Complexity (medium.com)
12298.
U.S. Government Open Data – Improve Household Energy Efficiency (techcrunch.com)
12299.
The Elephant's Foot (2013) (nautil.us)
12300.
How to Fit the World's Biggest Indoor Waterfall in an Airport (wired.com)