January 2019 Archive
14221.
Defense Innovation Board (innovation.defense.gov)
14222.
Unicode 12.0.0 Draft (unicode.org)
14223.
Reinforcement Learning: An Introduction – 2nd Edition [pdf] (incompleteideas.net)
14224.
Design Thinking in Blockchain and Crypto (ilmatic.com)
14225.
TensorFire (tenso.rs)
14226.
Kansas farmers are running out of water. Can they pull off an miracle (newfoodeconomy.org)
14227.
Top visitors to SecondLife.com by country. You'll never guess #1 now (not US) (nwn.blogs.com)
14228.
Cybercriminals Are Taking Advantage of Venezuela's Economic Crisis (motherboard.vice.com)
14229.
Our Language Affects What We See (scientificamerican.com)
14230.
Microsoft's big win: Pentagon signs massive $1.76bn contract (zdnet.com)
14231.
New Satellite Network Makes It Impossible for a Commercial Airplane to Vanish (cbsnews.com)
14232.
Theatre of Wokeness (longreads.com)
14233.
LokiJS – In Memory JavaScript Datastore with Persistence (github.com)
14234.
Decentralized, Privacy-Preserving Genomic Data Generation and Access (blockchainhealthcaretoday.com)
14235.
Electronic records are driving doctor burnout (philly.com)
14236.
Rule 3.03 (archivedinnings.com)
14237.
No Comments (gitlab.com)
14238.
U. Iowa-hatched startup beats Google in the race to bring AI to health care (magazine.foriowa.org)
14239.
Password Conundrum: Part 1 – CKD3, LLC (ckd3.com)
14240.
Researchers report breakthrough in ice-repelling materials (phys.org)
14241.
To Fight Fake News, Broaden Your Social Circle (daily.jstor.org)
14242.
I have watched you have sex with your wife
14243.
Fiserv is buying First Data in a $22B fintech megadeal (techcrunch.com)
14244.
Maybe WeWork Is Just a Real Estate Business (bloomberg.com)
14245.
Two Murderers Were Spotted on an Old Mark Jackson Trading Card (slamonline.com)
14246.
Huawei Is Target of U.S. Criminal Probe for Trade Secrets Theft (bloomberg.com)
14247.
Mypy 0.660 Released (mypy-lang.blogspot.com)
14248.
Hedgehog's Home (nfb.ca)
14249.
Ask HN: How to get rid of poverty and get in Upper class
14250.
Outlook is dim for Americans without college degrees (economist.com)