June 2019 Archive
9841.
US cities are joining forces to figure out what to do with all these scooters (theverge.com)
9842.
Ask HN: Why unikernels are not more popular?
9843.
Ask HN: At 9 cents/GB downloaded, how can any company afford cloud computing?
9844.
Show HN: Developers Homepage (fullstackend.com)
9845.
Finland is launching a (laughably insecure) mobile driver's license (teemuremes.com)
9846.
Ask HN: Python package for managing science datasets
9847.
Ask HN: How to deal with difficult subordinates as a manager?
9848.
Ask HN: Who are some programmers (in)famous for their quirky coding style?
9849.
Ask HN: Are you aware of any banks that offer a consumer API
9850.
This CSS shorthand would be so good (imgur.com)
9851.
Ask HN: Which mouse do you use?
9852.
The “SQL Is Just as Easy as an ORM” Challenge (gist.github.com)
9853.
Ask HN: How to improve the DX for a legacy rails app?
9854.
Jim Cramer: A 'Hard Left' Democratic President Would Be a 'Disaster' for Stocks (thestreet.com)
9855.
Huawei is preparing some truly pessimistic forecasts (medium.com)
9856.
The Greenland ice sheet is melting unusually fast (economist.com)
9857.
Ask HN: Powerpoint Alternatives
9858.
Ask HN: How do you pay for your trash?
9859.
Ask HN: I love freelancing. Then why do I hate it?
9860.
Wayfair Should Have Seen This Coming (theatlantic.com)
9861.
Power that uses no fossil fuels, produces no heat, and requires no combustion (ie.energy)
9862.
Ask HN: How do you provide SSH access to developers in your infrastructure
9863.
Is the Earth Flat? (answersingenesis.org)
9864.
Cross Platform simple and secure password management from commandline (github.com)
9865.
Best New smartphone of 2019 so far, and it only costs $500 (businessinsider.com)
9866.
Ask HN: How do you design configuration management solutions?
9867.
Email is our “thermal exhaust port” (medium.com)
9868.
Retired Atlanta professor sues Uber and Lyft, says they used his idea (ajc.com)
9869.
The best argument against UBI – Notes from Naval’s JRE interview (medium.com)
9870.
iPadOS impressions: flexible and powerful, but is it intuitive? (theverge.com)