February 2018 Archive
481.
Google dedicates engineering team to accelerate development of WordPress (searchengineland.com)
482.
Ask HN: How to understand the large codebase of an open-source project?
483.
Samsung’s Galaxy S9 looks set to retain the headphone jack (theverge.com)
484.
Finding Pwned Passwords with 1Password (blog.agilebits.com)
485.
Washington state has passed the country’s toughest net neutrality legislation (fastcompany.com)
486.
Fizz Buzz in Tensorflow (2016) (joelgrus.com)
487.
The Algorithm Design Manual (2008) (algorist.com)
488.
The cost of forsaking C (blog.bradfieldcs.com)
489.
Show HN: An extension to turn your LinkedIn into a resume (ceev.io)
490.
What Made Lisp Different (2002) (paulgraham.com)
491.
Ask HN: Best project management practices in 2018?
492.
Telegram has raised an initial $850M for its billion-dollar ICO (techcrunch.com)
493.
Tulip mania: the classic story of a Dutch financial bubble is mostly wrong (theconversation.com)
494.
Programming ARM μC in Rust at four different levels of abstraction (pramode.in)
495.
Technology Change Not the Culprit in Wages Falling Behind US Productivity Gains (nakedcapitalism.com)
496.
Samsung Galaxy S9 and S9+ (samsung.com)
497.
Australia’s new real-time banking payments platform (itnews.com.au)
498.
Why Developers Never Use State Machines (2011) (skorks.com)
499.
Amazon laying off corporate employees in rare cutback (seattletimes.com)
500.
ECMAScript 2018: final feature set (2ality.com)
501.
Apple Backs AV1: What Does This Mean for the Future of Video Codecs (blog.harmonicinc.com)
502.
Where the wall once stood (tagesspiegel.de)
503.
The cpu_features library (opensource.googleblog.com)
504.
Linux'izing your Windows PC into a dev machine (cepa.io)
505.
Malta: an island of secrets and lies (newstatesman.com)
506.
Plan 9 public grid (wiki.9gridchan.org)
507.
BPF comes to firewalls (lwn.net)
508.
SpaceX craft overshot Mars’ orbit and is headed to asteroid belt (theverge.com)
509.
Home-made drones now threaten conventional armed forces (economist.com)
510.
Skype can't fix a nasty security bug without a massive code rewrite (zdnet.com)