October 2018 Archive
841.
Show HN: Mole – an open source tool to easily create ssh tunnels (davrodpin.github.io)
842.
Why Are Japan’s Cherry Blossom Trees Blooming in Fall? (smithsonianmag.com)
843.
Advantages of Using R Notebooks Instead of Jupyter Notebooks (2017) (minimaxir.com)
844.
Google has sacked dozens over sexual harassment since 2016 (bbc.co.uk)
845.
Why Zig When There Is Already CPP, D, and Rust? (2017) (github.com)
846.
Fedora 29 (fedoramagazine.org)
847.
Two in Three Americans Now Support Legalizing Marijuana (news.gallup.com)
848.
Japan’s special take on a packed lunch (bbc.com)
849.
Global Kernel Locks in APFS (gregoryszorc.com)
850.
Eugene Shoemaker Is Still the Only Man Buried on the Moon (atlasobscura.com)
851.
How to read Kafka: part I (newcriterion.com)
852.
China’s hidden camps (bbc.co.uk)
853.
The Linux Backdoor Attempt of 2003 (freedom-to-tinker.com)
854.
Climate change and the 75% problem (gatesnotes.com)
855.
Why did the golden age of the Simpsons end? (nathancunn.com)
856.
The NSA Called Me After Midnight and Requested My Source Code (medium.com)
857.
Linus Torvalds Back in Charge of Linux (zdnet.com)
858.
Robinhood Gets Almost Half Its Revenue from Bargain with High-Speed Traders (bloomberg.com)
859.
A Hacker from South Africa Rescued the First NASA Computer in Space (2016) (atlasobscura.com)
860.
How Manhattan Became a Rich Ghost Town (theatlantic.com)
861.
Blazor, a framework for browser-based .NET apps using WebAssembly [video] (youtube.com)
862.
Why Netflix Rolled Its Own Node.js Functions-As-a-Service Runtime (thenewstack.io)
863.
Richard Branson suspends Saudi Arabia’s investment over missing journalist (theverge.com)
864.
Designing a new funding structure for bootstrappers (earnestcapital.co)
865.
The Murgia Hack System (mhsys.org)
866.
Are Black Holes Actually Dark Energy Stars? (nautil.us)
867.
Tricks That Can Outsmart Deepfake Videos for Now (wired.com)
868.
Do we really live longer than our ancestors? (bbc.com)
869.
Let’s talk about PAKE (blog.cryptographyengineering.com)
870.
Show HN: An Easy Programming Language That Runs in the Browser (kabas.online)