July 2018 Archive
61.
That $35 that scientific journals charge goes 100% to publisher, 0% to authors (twitter.com)
62.
Below the Surface – Finds from an archaeological project in the River Amstel (belowthesurface.amsterdam)
63.
Simple, correct, fast: in that order (drewdevault.com)
64.
Is WebAssembly the Return of Java Applets and Flash? (words.steveklabnik.com)
65.
Keeping a plaintext “did” file (theptrk.com)
66.
Worms frozen in permafrost for up to 42,000 years come back to life (siberiantimes.com)
67.
The secret call to Andy Grove that may have helped Apple buy NeXT (cake.co)
68.
How to beat LinkedIn: The Game (theoutline.com)
69.
Detecting the use of "curl | bash" server-side (idontplaydarts.com)
70.
Foundations Machine Learning (bloomberg.github.io)
71.
Learn how to write an emulator (emulator101.com)
72.
Ex-Valve employee describes internal politics at 'self-organizing' companies (pcgamer.com)
73.
“Stylish” browser extension steals all your internet history (robertheaton.com)
74.
iTerm2 has a new drawing engine that uses Metal 2 (gitlab.com)
75.
Why Google Stores Billions of Lines of Code in a Single Repository (2016) (cacm.acm.org)
76.
Unified access to the best community-driven cheat sheets repositories (github.com)
77.
Learning Dexterity (blog.openai.com)
78.
Uber shuts down self-driving trucks unit (techcrunch.com)
79.
MacOS Mojave removes subpixel anti-aliasing, making non-retina displays blurry (reddit.com)
80.
Half of ICOs Die Within Four Months After Token Sales Finalized (bloomberg.com)
81.
How America Uses Its Land (bloomberg.com)
82.
My adventures getting Disney’s Moana island scene to render well with Pbrt (pharr.org)
83.
Show HN: Router7 – A pure-Go implementation of a small home internet router (github.com)
84.
Apple releases software fix for MacBook Pro slowdown (sixcolors.com)
85.
China Begins Production Of x86 Processors Based On AMD's IP (tomshardware.com)
86.
Twitch streamers who spend years broadcasting to no one (theverge.com)
87.
Solar Just Hit a Record Low Price in the U.S (earther.com)
88.
Some Amazon Reviews Are Too Good to Be Believed – They're Paid For (npr.org)
89.
India's first RISC-V based Chip is Here: Linux boots on Shakti processor (geekdave.in)
90.
Ask HN: What are your favorite statistics and probability textbooks?