July 2017 Archive
1201.
Ask HN: What are the 5 websites you visit almost daily?
1202.
Ask HN: How do you backup your linux system?
1203.
Systemd can't handle the process privilege for username startswith number (github.com)
1204.
Tardigrades can survive until the end of the Earth, astrophysicists say (washingtonpost.com)
1205.
Daydream Labs: Teaching Skills in VR (blog.google)
1206.
Sometimes Not Working Is Work, Too (nymag.com)
1207.
Microsoft’s Embedded Learning Library (github.com)
1208.
Elon Musk’s Tunnel Plan Isn’t as Crazy as SpaceX or Tesla (bloomberg.com)
1209.
Killing car privacy by federal mandate (freedom-to-tinker.com)
1210.
The long-term cost of sexual harassment (techcrunch.com)
1211.
Buried tools and pigments tell a history of humans in Australia for 65,000 years (theconversation.com)
1212.
Encoding of a digital movie into the genomes of a population of living bacteria (nature.com)
1213.
Laurene Powell Jobs’s Organization to Take Majority Stake in The Atlantic (nytimes.com)
1214.
A Simulated Stable Planetary System with 416 Planets in the Habitable Zone (nautil.us)
1215.
Intro to Graph APIs (zapier.com)
1216.
HackMIT 2017 Admissions Puzzle (delorean.codes)
1217.
Exploiting Alpine Linux (twistlock.com)
1218.
Anomaly Detection of Time Series Data Using Machine Learning and Deep Learning (xenonstack.com)
1219.
Parity's Wallet Bug Is Not Alone (hackingdistributed.com)
1220.
Ravens attribute visual access to unseen competitors (nature.com)
1221.
Don't Settle for Eventual Consistency (2014) (queue.acm.org)
1222.
IBM z14 mainframe (ibm.com)
1223.
A Year After ‘Pokémon Go,’ Where Are the Augmented-Reality Hits? (wsj.com)
1224.
Misleading metaphors (economist.com)
1225.
How Uber's Hard-Charging Corporate Culture Left Employees Drained (buzzfeed.com)
1226.
Things to know about the A68 iceberg (eenews.net)
1227.
Training a neural net to generate British placenames (medium.com)
1228.
A new theory sheds light on the emergence of life’s complexity (nautil.us)
1229.
Heretical Things Statistics Tell Us About Fiction (newyorker.com)
1230.
Introducing sphinx-js, a better way to document large JavaScript projects (hacks.mozilla.org)