November 2015 Archive
931.
Shift.js: Swift to JavaScript Transpiler (github.com)
932.
All servers at OVH North American datacenters offline due to fiber cut (status.ovh.net)
933.
Haskell in ES6: Part 1 (casualjavascript.com)
934.
Deepwater Horizon Dispersants Backfired (theatlantic.com)
935.
NASA confirms yet again that the 'impossible' EMdrive thruster works (finance.yahoo.com)
936.
Attention Shoppers: Internet Is Open (1994) (nytimes.com)
937.
Using OpenStreetMap and GraphHopper to visit every pub in Dublin (graphhopper.com)
938.
Sisyphus Kinetic Lego Sculpture (jkbrickworks.com)
939.
Scientists identify main component of brain repair after stroke (nih.gov)
940.
The Beggar CEO and Sucker Culture (daedtech.com)
941.
Scaling Tor Hidden Services (benthamsgaze.org)
942.
How I ended up with so much Hacker News karma (2012) (blog.jgc.org)
943.
DRM in TIG welders (boingboing.net)
944.
Flat Will Kill You, Eventually: Why Every Company Needs Structure (themodernteam.com)
945.
Why Free Can Be a Problem on the Internet (nytimes.com)
946.
Layoffs Hit Gumroad as the E-Commerce Startup Restructures (techcrunch.com)
947.
Intel's 72-Core “Knight's Landing” Xeon Phi Chip Cleared for Takeoff (hothardware.com)
948.
133 Years Later, Gaudí’s Cathedral Nears Completion (news.nationalgeographic.com)
949.
Creating purpose-built TinyCoreLinux Images (fabianstumpf.de)
950.
What the Future of Working at Home May Look Like (wsj.com)
951.
FCC: We aren’t banning DD-WRT on Wi-Fi routers (arstechnica.com)
952.
What is it like to be owned by Warren Buffett? (gsb.stanford.edu)
953.
‘Stealth bomb’ antibiotic vanquishes drug-resistant bacteria in mice (nature.com)
954.
Abuse is indefensible (blog.mozilla.org)
955.
Telegram probably isn't as secure as ISIS thinks (motherboard.vice.com)
956.
Why the Public Can't Read the Press (theatlantic.com)
957.
Unicorns vs. Donkeys: Handy Guide to Distinguishing (medium.com)
958.
Stages in Pricing Computer Games (2014) (jeff-vogel.blogspot.com)
959.
Caffeine could limit damage of chronic stress (arstechnica.com)
960.
OOSMOS, the Object Oriented State Machine Operating System, Is Now Open Source (oosmos.com)