July 2017 Archive
1291.
Alienation 101: On Chinese Students in the American Midwest (1843magazine.com)
1292.
State of Elm 2017 Results (brianthicks.com)
1293.
Ether Tokens Are Likely Securities (2016) (decentralizedlegal.com)
1294.
How much do hackers at the CIA/NSA/FBI make?
1295.
Fractal: An Execution Model for Fine-Grain Nested Speculative Parallelism [pdf] (people.csail.mit.edu)
1296.
Show HN: An etcd backed DHCP server (github.com)
1297.
GraalVM – Polyglot: From the Very Old to the Very New [video] (eventil.com)
1298.
Let's Encrypt: Wildcard Certificates Coming January 2018 (letsencrypt.org)
1299.
Learn Python 3 the Hard Way (blog.learncodethehardway.com)
1300.
Building the XNU kernel on macOS Sierra (0xcc.re)
1301.
Ask HN: Name good examples of Modern C++ usage
1302.
The Map That Popularized the Word ‘Gerrymander’ (news.nationalgeographic.com)
1303.
Trip report: Summer ISO C++ standards meeting in Toronto (herbsutter.com)
1304.
McKinsey report: State of AI in 2017 [pdf] (mckinsey.com)
1305.
Vice: Go channels across many machines (medium.com)
1306.
‘F for Fake’: Orson Welles' masterpiece of oddball art cinema (dangerousminds.net)
1307.
FinTech 101: How financial technology affects everyday life [video] (reuters.com)
1308.
Ask HN: Freelancer? Seeking freelancer? (July 2017)
1309.
China may match or beat America in AI (economist.com)
1310.
Tesla Model 3 Delivery Event Livestream (livestream.tesla.com)
1311.
Genomic Analyses of Modern Dog Breed Development (cell.com)
1312.
Bitcoin Transaction Malleability (eklitzke.org)
1313.
Schleuder: A GPG-enabled mailinglist with remailing-capabilities (schleuder.nadir.org)
1314.
Using chip memory more efficiently (news.mit.edu)
1315.
Building lattice reduction (LLL) intuition (kel.bz)
1316.
Learning Machine Learning from 187 Quora Questions (unsupervisedmethods.com)
1317.
The scientific reason you don’t like LED bulbs – and the simple way to fix them (theconversation.com)
1318.
Ask HN: How do you decide on when to leave/switch job?
1319.
How to Tell the Truth (a16z.com)
1320.
Most unicorn founders are graduates of Stanford, Harvard, and the IITs (qz.com)