September 2017 Archive
421.
MIT’s Senior House dormitory closes, and a crisis blooms at colleges (wired.com)
422.
Survival of the Prettiest (nytimes.com)
423.
Apple Watch 3 (techcrunch.com)
424.
‘Uncontacted’ Amazon Tribe Members Are Reported Killed in Brazil (nytimes.com)
425.
Hell is a multi-threaded C++ program (2006) (codemines.blogspot.com)
426.
North American Regional Dialects and Accents (2016) (aschmann.net)
427.
Show HN: Key Values – Find engineering teams that share your values (keyvalues.io)
428.
Anthony Levandowski, self driving car whiz who fell from grace (wired.com)
429.
Sysadmin war story: the network ate my font (verticalsysadmin.com)
430.
The great nutrient collapse (politico.com)
431.
Understanding Uber: It's Not About the App (londonreconnections.com)
432.
Magit Kickstarter fully funded (kickstarter.com)
433.
Nuitka: a Python compiler (nuitka.net)
434.
Relicensing the GraphQL specification (medium.com)
435.
The rise and fall of Ext JS (medium.com)
436.
Rapid release at massive scale (code.facebook.com)
437.
Linux System Call Table (thevivekpandey.github.io)
438.
Olin College Produces Founders at Five Times the Rate of Stanford (blog.ledwards.com)
439.
Hackers who broke into Equifax exploited a flaw in open-source server software (qz.com)
440.
Man convicted after preventing counter-terrorism police search (news.met.police.uk)
441.
No matter what, Equifax may tell you you’ve been impacted by the hack (techcrunch.com)
442.
The tale of aux.c (heirloom.sourceforge.net)
443.
Reported difficulties getting help on Equifax's phone lines (washingtonpost.com)
444.
House Address “Twins” Proximity (paulplowman.com)
445.
Show HN: Reddit Grid – A better way to browse subreddits that are very visual (redditgrid.com)
446.
What does an innocent man have to do to go free? Plead guilty (propublica.org)
447.
Tell HN: We'll pay for you to sue Equifax
448.
Continued G4 (Severe) Geomagnetic Storming Observed (swpc.noaa.gov)
449.
A 1 KB Docker Container (blog.quickmediasolutions.com)
450.
Show HN: 1 KB JavaScript framework for building front-end applications (github.com)