January 2020 Archive
331.
Show HN: A beetle generator made by machine-learning zoological illustrations (cunicode.com)
332.
How Popular Is “Sign in with Apple”? (daringfireball.net)
333.
Lisping at JPL (2002) (flownet.com)
334.
Rough.js v4.0 – hand-drawn, sketchy graphics (roughjs.com)
335.
Alpine makes Python Docker builds slower, and images larger (pythonspeed.com)
336.
CERN Ends Trial of Facebook Workplace (home.cern)
337.
Ask HN: I think I’ve burnt out. What should I do?
338.
NOAA Satellites Helped Save a Record 421 Lives in 2019 (noaa.gov)
339.
Tin Found in Israel from 3k Years Ago Comes from Cornwall (archaeology-world.com)
340.
Why build this blog, or anything, on IPFS? (teetotality.blog)
341.
How I make $400/month with my technical eBook (twitter.com)
342.
How to Find New Music (solfej.io)
343.
How to make roguelike games in Rust (bfnightly.bracketproductions.com)
344.
3D Buzz is shutting down (3dbuzz.com)
345.
For suicide prevention, try raising the minimum wage, research suggests (npr.org)
346.
Trapped in Iran: My Summer as a Guest of the Revolutionary Guards (1843magazine.com)
347.
Thunderbird’s New Home (blog.thunderbird.net)
348.
Academic Torrents (academictorrents.com)
349.
What is Rust and why is it so popular? (stackoverflow.blog)
350.
Ubuntu 20.04 LTS Adds WireGuard Support (phoronix.com)
351.
Our field isn't quite “artificial intelligence” – it's “cognitive automation” (twitter.com)
352.
Rete: JavaScript framework for visual programming and creating node editor (github.com)
353.
MirageJS: An API mocking library for frontend development (miragejs.com)
354.
Oracle copied Amazon’s API – was that copyright infringement? (arstechnica.com)
355.
KnightOS was an interesting operating system (drewdevault.com)
356.
California's housing bill SB 50 has died in the state Senate (usatoday.com)
357.
Cartridge cannot be used until printer is enrolled in HP Instant Ink (twitter.com)
358.
Television viewing and cognitive decline in older age (nature.com)
359.
FDA and NIH let clinical trial sponsors keep results secret and break the law (sciencemag.org)
360.
Why Japan is so successful at returning lost property (bbc.com)