January 2020 Archive
931.
Rocket League left behind on macOS and Linux due to DirectX 11 shift (gamasutra.com)
932.
Humans are hardwired to dismiss facts that don’t fit their worldview (niemanlab.org)
933.
Worst Ed-Tech Debacles of the Decade (hackeducation.com)
934.
DirecTV races to decommission broken satellite before it explodes (arstechnica.com)
935.
Hundreds of workers defy Amazon rules to protest company's climate failures (theguardian.com)
936.
Neumorphism in User Interfaces (uxdesign.cc)
937.
How Billion Dollar Marketplaces Are Built (nfx.com)
938.
How to Write a Book in Emacs (2015) (masteringemacs.org)
939.
Realm of Racket (realmofracket.com)
940.
The Boring Company’s Las Vegas tunnel is nearly 50% done (teslarati.com)
941.
Google Sheets was down (sheets.google.com)
942.
The Shapes of Code (fluentcpp.com)
943.
A game in a pure language (part 1): introduction and problems with Idris (flowing.systems)
944.
Firefox 72 – our first song of 2020 (hacks.mozilla.org)
945.
Records Come to Java (blogs.oracle.com)
946.
Detroit's salt mine: City beneath the city (detroitnews.com)
947.
Rolling Stones tracks posted briefly on YouTube in attempt to extend copyright (theguardian.com)
948.
Equinix is acquiring Packet (packet.com)
949.
Rat had 'no brain' and somehow lived a normal life (news.northeastern.edu)
950.
The Polygons of Another World: IBM PC (fabiensanglard.net)
951.
Serving Dynamic Vector Tiles from PostGIS (info.crunchydata.com)
952.
Simple Tiny Compiler in C (github.com)
953.
Vim9: An experimental fork of Vim to explore making Vim script faster and better (github.com)
954.
Pinscreen Deepfake Live Prototype [video] (youtube.com)
955.
U.S. cancer death rate drops by largest annual margin ever, report says (statnews.com)
956.
FFmpeg libav tutorial – from basic to transmuxing, transcoding and more (github.com)
957.
Microsoft Project Verona: Research programming language for concurrent ownership (github.com)
958.
Google YOLO clickjacking (2018) (blog.innerht.ml)
959.
Why so many things cost exactly zero (bloomberg.com)
960.
Hopefully fair performance reviews for software developers (blog.pragmaticengineer.com)