2018 Archive
11731.
ASCIIToSVG: Convert ASCII Diagrams to Beautiful SVGs (github.com)
11732.
Federal Judge: Albuquerque's Asset Forfeiture is Unconstitutional (reason.com)
11733.
Surviving the App Store (github.com)
11734.
US Dept of Energy AS32982 Network Possibly BGP Hijacked by China Telecom (bgpstream.com)
11735.
Clojure Numerics: Orthogonalization and Least Squares (dragan.rocks)
11736.
Statistical Techniques Data Scientists Need to Master (towardsdatascience.com)
11737.
Cambridge Analytica staff set up new firm (bbc.co.uk)
11738.
XKCD on Docker (xkcd.com)
11739.
Beautiful maths simplification: quaternion from two vectors (2013) (lolengine.net)
11740.
How the hell have you done it? (1961) (lettersofnote.com)
11741.
I’m leaving Mozilla (daniel.haxx.se)
11742.
Facebook's Open-Source Reinforcement Learning Platform – A Deep Dive (xaviergeerinck.com)
11743.
Mozilla revives Mozilla Labs (ghacks.net)
11744.
Lawsuits Aim Billions in Fines at Equifax and Ad-Targeting Companies (threatpost.com)
11745.
Linux is Obsolete (1992) (groups.google.com)
11746.
Why work has failed us: Because no one can afford to retire anymore (fastcompany.com)
11747.
The Bezos backlash: Is 'big philanthropy' a charade? (bbc.com)
11748.
Mortgage rates have been rising at a pace not seen in almost 50 years (lmtonline.com)
11749.
The Ambien Diaries (popula.com)
11750.
Twitter Permanently Bans Alex Jones and Infowars (thedailybeast.com)
11751.
WeWork Is Raising Funds at $35B Valuation (bloomberg.com)
11752.
From Java to Go, and Back Again (2016) (opencredo.com)
11753.
Tesla, software and disruption (ben-evans.com)
11754.
A faster, cheaper path to fusion energy (phys.org)
11755.
Who needs democracy when you have data? (technologyreview.com)
11756.
Cognitive Ability and Vulnerability to Fake News (scientificamerican.com)
11757.
Tesla Q2 2018 Vehicle Production and Deliveries (ir.tesla.com)
11758.
Singapore to test facial recognition on lampposts, stoking privacy fears (reuters.com)
11759.
Designing Google Maps for Motorbikes (design.google)
11760.
Intel’s High-End Cascade Lake CPUs to Support 3.84 TB of Memory per Socket (anandtech.com)