September 2019 Archive
721.
Reinventing the Network Stack for Compute-Intensive Applications (darpa.mil)
722.
Teardown of a Failed Linux LTS Spectre Fix (grsecurity.net)
723.
Parallel GCC: a research project aiming to parallelize a real-world compiler (gcc.gnu.org)
724.
FreeBSD on the Lenovo Thinkpad (davidschlachter.com)
725.
“Did You Eat the Whole Cake?” On Learning Estonian (deepbaltic.com)
726.
Nebraska Furniture Mart (en.wikipedia.org)
727.
CentOS Stream (redhat.com)
728.
California's ‘Surprise’ Billing Law Is Protecting Patients and Angering Doctors (nytimes.com)
729.
Efficient string copying and concatenation in C (developers.redhat.com)
730.
Mystery surrounds lost German sea data station (bbc.co.uk)
731.
New blood test could detect more than 20 types of cancer (telegraph.co.uk)
732.
Kiss – A Linux distribution with a focus on “less is more” (getkiss.org)
733.
Statisticians want to abandon science’s standard measure of ‘significance’ (sciencenews.org)
734.
Prescription drugs and grapefruit a 'deadly mix' (2012) (nhs.uk)
735.
The Crash of United Flight 232 (2017) (popularmechanics.com)
736.
China Seeks to Buy Control of Hong Kong Companies (bloomberg.com)
737.
Rustler is a library for writing Erlang NIFs in safe Rust code (github.com)
738.
My OpenStreetMap Workflow: Mapping the Village of Marmari, Evia (code.mendhak.com)
739.
Xinjiang University President Tashpolat Tiyip Sentenced to Death in Secret Trial (u.osu.edu)
740.
California Labor Bill, Near Passage, Is Blow to Uber and Lyft (nytimes.com)
741.
Genetically modified mosquitoes breed in Brazil (dw.com)
742.
Upstreaming multipath TCP (lwn.net)
743.
GCC eBPF for Linux port has landed (gcc.gnu.org)
744.
A Simple Structure Unites All Human Languages (nautil.us)
745.
The Forbes ‘30 Under 30’ Hustle (theinformation.com)
746.
Driving an Ambulance in the Age of Narcan (hazlitt.net)
747.
The news industry was complicit in the opioid crisis (cjr.org)
748.
Dark Mode for Slack (slackhq.com)
749.
Cisco Is Said to Have Offered $7B-Plus for DataDog (bloomberg.com)
750.
Day Two to One Day (stratechery.com)