November 2015 Archive
421.
Swedish court: 'We cannot ban Pirate Bay' (thelocal.se)
422.
The Trip Planners: The Unusual Couple Behind Erowid (newyorker.com)
423.
Which language has the brightest future for replacing C: D, Go, Rust? (quora.com)
424.
An obsession with safe spaces is not just bad for education (economist.com)
425.
I Want to Run Stateful Containers, Too (techcrunch.com)
426.
A New ‘Star Trek’ TV Series Will Debut in 2017 (nytimes.com)
427.
Dropbox API v2 launches (blogs.dropbox.com)
428.
The Birth of ZFS [video] (youtube.com)
429.
Brutal baboon battle erupts for throne at Toronto Zoo after matriarch dies (thestar.com)
430.
Nintendo Controller Teardown (fictiv.com)
431.
Suspension Bridges of Disbelief (hackaday.com)
432.
Keys to a successful Google team (rework.withgoogle.com)
433.
Strange Things That Have Been Happening in Financial Markets (bloomberg.com)
434.
'Escape Rooms' Challenge Players To Solve Puzzles To Get Out (npr.org)
435.
JB-9 jetpack makes debut flying around Statue of Liberty (gizmag.com)
436.
Waterfox – A fast browser (waterfoxproject.org)
437.
Sct – set color temperature (tedunangst.com)
438.
Belgium Tells Facebook to Stop Storing Personal Data from Non-Users (bloomberg.com)
439.
Cutting a Klein Bottle in Half [video] (youtube.com)
440.
Earth Might Have Hairy Dark Matter (nasa.gov)
441.
UN privacy head slams 'worse than scary' UK surveillance bill (theregister.co.uk)
442.
Why I Wrote PGP (1999) (philzimmermann.com)
443.
It’s Way Too Easy to Hack the Hospital (bloomberg.com)
444.
Jessica Livingston on the Accidental Origin of Y Combinator (macro.ycombinator.com)
445.
NASA Study: Mass Gains of Antarctic Ice Sheet Greater Than Losses (nasa.gov)
446.
Facebook is now scanning your photos to make sure you send them to your friends (finance.yahoo.com)
447.
Telegram bans public ISIS channels (washingtonpost.com)
448.
I rewrote Firefox's BMP decoder (blog.mozilla.org)
449.
Advanced economies are so sick we need a new way to think about them (washingtonpost.com)
450.
U.S. airlines have shifted maintenance work to developing countries (vanityfair.com)