March 2019 Archive
751.
Compiler Basics: LLVM (notes.eatonphil.com)
752.
Types Are Moving to the Right (medium.com)
753.
Bootstrapping Calculator: Do you have enough savings to fund your business? (github.com)
754.
Russia blocks ProtonMail (techcrunch.com)
755.
Is C# a low-level language? (mattwarren.org)
756.
Deadlines and sprints are bad for you (medium.com)
757.
Nasa's Visual Universe (artsexperiments.withgoogle.com)
758.
‘A Swiss cheese-like material’ that can solve equations (penntoday.upenn.edu)
759.
An Intel Programmer Jumps over Wall: First Impressions of ARM SIMD Programming (branchfree.org)
760.
Uber is dropping rates for drivers down from 80 cents/mile to 60 cents/mile (slate.com)
761.
Streaming video has surpassed cable subscriptions worldwide (theverge.com)
762.
Engineering for the Long Haul, the Nasa Way (hackaday.com)
763.
Bribes to Get into Yale and Stanford? What Else Is New? (nytimes.com)
764.
Some airlines and regulators ground 737 Max in wake of Ethiopian Airlines crash (flightradar24.com)
765.
Understanding Real-World Concurrency Bugs in Go [pdf] (golangweekly.com)
766.
A guide to threads in Node.js (blog.logrocket.com)
767.
ROSshow: ASCII art visualizations for robot sensor data (github.com)
768.
Rogue Airbnb listings still exist where short-term rentals aren't allowed (cbc.ca)
769.
PEP 584 – Add + and – operators to the built-in dict class (python.org)
770.
Sensible Software Engineering (scriptcrafty.com)
771.
Forget Bribery – The Real Scam Is Pretending That Degrees Have Value (bloomberg.com)
772.
Why OpenBSD Rocks (why-openbsd.rocks)
773.
Intel lays off hundreds of tech administrators (oregonlive.com)
774.
Construct-JS – A library for creating byte level data structures (github.com)
775.
Self-forgiveness for procrastinating can reduce future procrastination (2010) [pdf] (law.utexas.edu)
776.
How to Be a Stoic (2016) (newyorker.com)
777.
RFC8482 – Saying Goodbye to ANY (blog.cloudflare.com)
778.
Intel CPUs afflicted with simple data-spewing spec-exec vulnerability (theregister.co.uk)
779.
Tim Cook explains why you don’t need a college degree to be successful (businessinsider.com)
780.
Why Do So Many Egyptian Statues Have Broken Noses? (artsy.net)