September 2018 Archive
241.
Don't Steal Money from Day Traders Before They Lose It (bloomberg.com)
242.
Manyverse – A social network off the grid (manyver.se)
243.
Breaking bad news (boz.com)
244.
Voting Machine Used in Half of U.S. Is Vulnerable to Attack, Report Finds (wsj.com)
245.
UPDuino: a $9.99 FPGA (tinyletter.com)
246.
Why I never finish my Haskell programs (blog.plover.com)
247.
How counterfeits benefit Amazon (latimes.com)
248.
Haiku R1/beta1 has been released (haiku-os.org)
249.
Idle Until Urgent (philipwalton.com)
250.
Was ditching the headphone jack a good idea? (soundguys.com)
251.
You can't play Bach on Facebook because Sony says they own his compositions (boingboing.net)
252.
Dark Motives and Elective Use of Brainteaser Interview Questions (onlinelibrary.wiley.com)
253.
Is “data scientist” the new “programmer”? (blogs.harvard.edu)
254.
India court legalises gay sex in landmark ruling (bbc.com)
255.
I don't want to learn your query language (erikbern.com)
256.
Please Google, let us revert to the classic Gmail look (productforums.google.com)
257.
Ask HN: How do you decide when you've done enough work for the day?
258.
Deep image reconstruction from human brain activity (2017) (biorxiv.org)
259.
$600 Chromebooks are a dangerous development for Microsoft (arstechnica.com)
260.
SpaceX's rise can be traced to a critical launch from a Pacific isle (arstechnica.com)
261.
CLIP OS – France’s cybersecurity agency’s open source, secured operating system (ssi.gouv.fr)
262.
How we rolled out one of the largest Python 3 migrations (blogs.dropbox.com)
263.
Remote Code Execution in Alpine Linux (justi.cz)
264.
A rogue Romanian economist legally gamed the lottery (thehustle.co)
265.
Show HN: Py-spy – A new sampling profiler for Python programs (github.com)
266.
Show HN: Hacklily – sheet music editor (hacklily.org)
267.
Learning BASIC Like It's 1983 (twobithistory.org)
268.
How to Procrastinate Productively (nickwignall.com)
269.
Skip – A programming language to skip the things you have already computed (skiplang.com)
270.
Google Fiber Is High-Speed Internet’s Most Successful Failure (hbr.org)