February 2018 Archive
241.
How Apple Plans to Root Out Bugs, Revamp iPhone Software (bloomberg.com)
242.
A Company That Tears Cars Apart to Find Out How They're Built (jalopnik.com)
243.
Origami Simulator (apps.amandaghassaei.com)
244.
A Programmable Programming Language (cacm.acm.org)
245.
FAA Tapes from That Oregon UFO Incident (thedrive.com)
246.
RFC: Ubuntu 18.04 LTS Minimal Images (blog.dustinkirkland.com)
247.
CSS Grid changes everything [video] (youtube.com)
248.
Facebook's Desperate Smoke Screen (calnewport.com)
249.
Nix 2.0 Released (nixos.org)
250.
Wolfenstein's original rendering engine as 450 line shader with no external data (shadertoy.com)
251.
Lessons learned while developing Age of Empires 1 Definitive Edition (richg42.blogspot.com)
252.
Go accepts patches from GitHub pull requests now (github.com)
253.
Building Your Own CDN for Fun and Profit (pasztor.at)
254.
Sex and STEM: Stubborn Facts and Stubborn Ideologies (quillette.com)
255.
Ask HN: What's the best algorithms and data structures online course?
256.
A Brief Glance at How Various Text Editors Manage Their Textual Data (2015) (ecc-comp.blogspot.com)
257.
Solving Minesweeper and making it better (2015) (magnushoff.com)
258.
A Developer’s Guide to Responding to National Security Letters (twilio.com)
259.
Why the world needs OpenStreetMap (2014) (blog.emacsen.net)
260.
Introduction to LLVM [video] (fosdem.org)
261.
The FBI, CIA and NSA say American citizens shouldn't use Huawei phones (money.cnn.com)
262.
Elevated Use of Absolutist Words Is a Marker of Anxiety, Depression [pdf] (journals.sagepub.com)
263.
LLVM for Grad Students (2015) (cs.cornell.edu)
264.
Reach for Markdown, not LaTeX (blog.jez.io)
265.
Snap Revenue Surges 72% on User Growth, Advertising Gains (bloomberg.com)
266.
Donkey Kong scoreboard strips high score claim (arstechnica.com)
267.
Paradigms of Artificial Intelligence Programming (1992) (github.com)
268.
The outdoor community made water filtration a must for a reason (outsideonline.com)
269.
The Feds Can Now Probably Unlock Every iPhone Model (forbes.com)
270.
A British couple who took on Google and cost it £2.1B (wired.co.uk)