February 2018 Archive
631.
Time Travelers (inference-review.com)
632.
Citi to Refund $330M to Credit Card Customers It Overcharged (nytimes.com)
633.
Struggles of Women Who Mask Their Autism (theatlantic.com)
634.
JSON Schema (json-schema.org)
635.
Marrying Vega and Zen: The AMD Ryzen 5 2400G Review (anandtech.com)
636.
Show HN: Web Scraping in Google Sheets (link.fish)
637.
NLP concepts with spaCy tutorial (gist.github.com)
638.
Tilemap generation from single example using ideas from quantum mechanics (github.com)
639.
Musk explains why SpaceX prefers clusters of small engines (arstechnica.com)
640.
Coinbase Commerce: merchants can accept multiple digital currencies (medium.com)
641.
Many medical devices on the market have undergone no clinical testing (nytimes.com)
642.
Talks I have given (dtrace.org)
643.
Apple Reports First Quarter Results (apple.com)
644.
You Probably Don't Need a Blockchain (ashtonkemerling.com)
645.
Financial Times journo's private messages quoted to her at China visa renewal (twitter.com)
646.
U.S. senators ask consumer watchdog head for details on Equifax probe (reuters.com)
647.
A Sleeping Alexa Can Listen for More Than Just Its Name (spectrum.ieee.org)
648.
FAA Issues Emergency Order of Revocation Against TapJets (faa.gov)
649.
Multifamily Passive House in Vancouver (treehugger.com)
650.
How Apple is paving the way to a ‘cloud dictatorship’ in China (hongkongfp.com)
651.
Ten Years of Instapaper (blog.instapaper.com)
652.
A todo list for new ASP.NET Core projects (biarity.gitlab.io)
653.
OpenPose: Real-time multi-person body, face, and hands estimation (github.com)
654.
Yann LeCun vs. Christopher Manning on Need for Priors in Deep Learning (abigailsee.com)
655.
A promenade of PyTorch (goldsborough.me)
656.
Just what does “code as data” mean anyway? (2014) (adambard.com)
657.
Three Meanings of E=mc² (medium.com)
658.
Chinese police don high-tech glasses to nab suspects (hongkongfp.com)
659.
California-Grown Coffee Is Becoming the State's Next Gold Mine (npr.org)
660.
Stop replacing London’s phone boxes with corporate surveillance (wired.co.uk)