October 2018 Archive
571.
Some studies show an association between the herpes virus and Alzheimer’s (theconversation.com)
572.
NIST: Blockchain Technology Overview [pdf] (nvlpubs.nist.gov)
573.
Pharo: An immersive programming experience (pharo.org)
574.
Christie’s sells its first AI portrait for $432k (theverge.com)
575.
Ask HN: First month job anxiety. Am I actually an impostor?
576.
Three hundred and sixty years of United States caselaw (case.law)
577.
Falcon: A high-performance web server for Ruby, supporting HTTP/2 and HTTPS (github.com)
578.
It's not okay to pretend your software is open source (drewdevault.com)
579.
Gig-Economy Workers Are the Modern Proletariat (bloomberg.com)
580.
A fun optimization trick from rsync (blog.plover.com)
581.
Gates Still Working Behind the Scenes at Microsoft (redmondmag.com)
582.
Grad Student Solved a Fundamental Quantum Computing Problem (wired.com)
583.
The Magic Leap Con (gizmodo.com)
584.
Academic Grievance Studies and the Corruption of Scholarship (areomagazine.com)
585.
SpaceX’s Falcon Heavy rocket seems to be a hit with satellite companies (arstechnica.com)
586.
New York Attorney General Expands Inquiry into Net Neutrality Comments (nytimes.com)
587.
Perceptual Illusions (nautil.us)
588.
US election system reveals frightening vulnerabilities at almost every level (vox.com)
589.
Surgery students 'losing dexterity to stitch patients' (bbc.com)
590.
Myth of the Brown Recluse (spiders.ucr.edu)
591.
Interface Hall of Shame – QuickTime 4.0 Player (1999) (hallofshame.gp.co.at)
592.
15TB HDDs: Western Digital Unveils the Ultrastar DC HC620 (anandtech.com)
593.
Talking to the Mailman – Interview with Richard Stallman (newleftreview.org)
594.
Alarm as China eases 25-year ban on rhino and tiger parts (bbc.com)
595.
Former Groupon CEO Andrew Mason on what the roller-coaster ride felt like (nymag.com)
596.
Ham vs. Ham as Radio Amateurs Are in Conflict with ARRL (perens.com)
597.
See what you can create with 140 characters of JavaScript and a canvas (dwitter.net)
598.
Towards fearless SIMD (raphlinus.github.io)
599.
Show HN: Coffee Chat – Trade your expertise (coffeechat.app)
600.
Supermicro boards were so bug ridden, why would hackers ever need implants? (arstechnica.com)