August 2019 Archive
15871.
Linux turns 28 today (lkml.iu.edu)
15872.
Fast Tensors in Clojure (dragan.rocks)
15873.
Show HN: Portray – Beautiful documentation for Python projects automatically (timothycrosley.com)
15874.
Linux Ate My RAM Script to Check Usage (myrandomtips.com)
15875.
What 4C World Looks Like (youtube.com)
15876.
How to serve HTTP 1, 2, & 3 in Python (pgjones.dev)
15877.
Haskell Summer of Code – Hadrian Optimisation: Final Report (medium.com)
15878.
Datomic: Tuples and Database Predicates (blog.datomic.com)
15879.
The Hard Truth: Nobody Has Time to Write Tests (medium.com)
15880.
There were no guidelines for fecal transplants. Then, a patient died (nbcnews.com)
15881.
The Future of Networks Depends on Hyperscalers and Big Clouds (nextplatform.com)
15882.
Show HN: Using GitHub Actions to create dynamic Twitter cover photos (github.com)
15883.
The 2 dead-simple reasons your business should use Angular (medium.com)
15884.
Onboard Lap – Porsche Taycan Sets a Record at the Nürburgring-Nordschleife (youtube.com)
15885.
A Love Letter to Neighborhood Bookshops (nytimes.com)
15886.
Neural Transfer Learning in NLP for Post-Traumatic-Stress-Disorder Assessment (medium.com)
15887.
Supply chain attacks against open source is getting worse (arstechnica.com)
15888.
Gartner’s Legacy System Exposed Online (securitydiscovery.com)
15889.
What the voice inside your head says about you (bbc.com)
15890.
Life After Reading “The Uninhabitable Earth” (ideaspace.substack.com)
15891.
Fortnite and Roblox Are Changing Social Media as We Know It (hackernoon.com)
15892.
Narcine: Building an Electric Vehicle as a Side Project (failory.com)
15893.
Linux Insides (0xax.gitbooks.io)
15894.
Investigative reporting started #MeToo. We’re now asking it to do too much (slate.com)
15895.
Small Rule (en.wikipedia.org)
15896.
pDoS – censorship resistant collaborative DDoS-ing
15897.
How to make a complete web-app fit in less than 1500 bytes? (medium.com)
15898.
Webmin: A web-based Linux management tool (redhat.com)
15899.
Kotlin adds support for compiling to WebAssembly (github.com)
15900.
The worlds smallest virtual DOM JavaScript engine is just 512 bytes (github.com)