September 2016 Archive
331.
Show HN: Open-source search engine with 2bn-page index (deusu.org)
332.
Kubernetes 1.4: Making it easy to run on Kubernetes anywhere (blog.kubernetes.io)
333.
Valve Bans Game Publisher After It Sues Players That Gave It Bad Steam Reviews (motherboard.vice.com)
334.
Tesla envy grips Germany’s giants (autonews.com)
335.
Infrastructure Mistakes Companies Should Avoid (firstround.com)
336.
Why billions of dollars of goods are stuck at sea (economist.com)
337.
What 2,000 Calories Looks Like (2014) (nytimes.com)
338.
Oct. 4 (google.com)
339.
First Ever Quadriplegic Treated with Stem Cells Regains Upper Body Motor Control (goodnewsnetwork.org)
340.
How to Crash Systemd in One Command (agwa.name)
341.
India’s Space Agency Hits New Milestone With Satellite Launch (blogs.wsj.com)
342.
On DRY and the cost of wrongful abstractions (thereignn.ghost.io)
343.
New P2 Instance Type for Amazon EC2 – Up to 16 GPUs (aws.amazon.com)
344.
Experiments with disabling the ME on Sandybridge x230 (coreboot.org)
345.
Don't Start Big, Start a Little Snowball (blog.nugget.one)
346.
Learn Node.js: A free interactive course for Node beginners (hyperdev.com)
347.
Twitter: It is too late for it to become the giant people expected (economist.com)
348.
Sugar industry secretly paid for favorable Harvard research (statnews.com)
349.
Realm Mobile Platform – Realtime Sync Plus Fully Open Source Database (realm.io)
350.
Elementary OS Loki 0.4 Stable Release (blog.elementary.io)
351.
A Soviet scientist created tame foxes (bbc.com)
352.
How the FDA Manipulates the Media (scientificamerican.com)
353.
Incremental Compilation (blog.rust-lang.org)
354.
V86 – An x86-compatible CPU and hardware emulator (github.com)
355.
Racket – Lisp beyond Clojure (slides.com)
356.
Consistency is Consistently Undervalued (kevinmahoney.co.uk)
357.
How Anxiety Warps Your Perception (bbc.com)
358.
iOS 10: Security Weakness Discovered, Backup Passwords Much Easier to Break (blog.elcomsoft.com)
359.
Search Results are officially AMP’d (search.googleblog.com)
360.
Google backs off on previously announced Allo privacy feature (theverge.com)