August 2017 Archive
7681.
Inside the Chinese-led gambling epidemic in rural Ghana (latimes.com)
7682.
Hackers Demand Millions from HBO or Game of Thrones Leaks Continue (edgylabs.com)
7683.
Machine Learning Links and Lessons Learned (github.com)
7684.
Humble Book Bundle: Brainiac 2 Presented by No Starch (humblebundle.com)
7685.
Investor’s Guide to Spotting Psychopaths (sosv.com)
7686.
How ADP Adopted a Container Mindset (thenewstack.io)
7687.
Photo-Editing App FaceApp Adds Asian, Black, Caucasian, and Indian Filters (mic.com)
7688.
Speedtest Global Index (speedtest.net)
7689.
How to Send Ethereum Transactions with Java (techblog.bozho.net)
7690.
Overview of Artificial Neural Networks and Its Applications (hackernoon.com)
7691.
Some U.S. coding boot camps stumble in a crowded field (reuters.com)
7692.
Hacker News Censorship
7693.
Invisible Fences (v-e-n-u-e.com)
7694.
Big Data and why it’s Big (medium.com)
7695.
As eclipse madness spreads, so do conspiracy theories (arstechnica.com)
7696.
Dave Thomas: Elixir for Programmers (codestool.coding-gnome.com)
7697.
Bees are first insects shown to understand the concept of zero (newscientist.com)
7698.
Hellblade is an audio nightmare (polygon.com)
7699.
Amazon Web Services Joins Cloud Native Computing Foundation (cncf.io)
7700.
Maps Show How Water Can Be a Precious Lifeline or a Deadly Weapon (news.nationalgeographic.com)
7701.
Wine 2.14 Released (winehq.org)
7702.
As net neutrality dies, one man wants to make Verizon pay for its sins (theverge.com)
7703.
Statement and Questions Regarding an Indian Court’s Order to Block Archive.org (blog.archive.org)
7704.
On the stability of four legged tables (2006) (arxiv.org)
7705.
What Happens When a Taoist Feels Sad? (therabbitisin.com)
7706.
How one hot sauce seller hauled Uber into small-claims court and won $4,000 (arstechnica.com)
7707.
Mozilla launches new effort to counter fake news (thehill.com)
7708.
Baldur’s Gender (quarterly.camposanto.com)
7709.
Why Top Designers Are Adopting a Development Mentality (themartec.com)
7710.
Biohackers encoded malware in DNA (wired.com)