November 2018 Archive
4531.
Ask HN: Should Apple Buy Duck Duck Go?
4532.
Islanders Who Killed American Have a History of Guarding Their Isolation (nytimes.com)
4533.
Is It Time to Move on from WordPress? (forestry.io)
4534.
What Truly Makes a Senior Developer (medium.com)
4535.
Show HN: NET Core for CPanel (NexusCore)
4536.
Ask HN: Suggestions for an exemplar Java project to showcase in class
4537.
How CraneAi uses Artificial Intelligence to help teams build apps faster (medium.com)
4538.
Facebook founder called trusting users dumb f*cks (theregister.co.uk)
4539.
Ask HN: Is the annual Nautilus subscription worth it?
4540.
How to Convince Someone When Facts Fail (scientificamerican.com)
4541.
Why Epik welcomed Gab.com (epik.com)
4542.
Ramen noodles are apparently responsible for one in five childhood scald burns (6abc.com)
4543.
Your Tesla Can Go Zero to 60 in 2.5 Seconds but Can’t Get AM Radio (wsj.com)
4544.
Ask HN: AI Sign Language translators
4545.
Ask HN: What do you do to boost creativity?
4546.
Twitter allowing obvious scams being promoted (imgur.com)
4547.
Ask HN: Any people who work at a small shop, and prefer AWS?
4548.
Steve Wozniak: 'I do not believe in auto driving cars' – it's not possible yet (cnbc.com)
4549.
Ask HN: All-in-one backend solution for your apps. Feedback?
4550.
aaaa (twitter.com)
4551.
Peeking under the hood of redesigned Gmail (medium.com)
4552.
The Facebook Era Is Over (linkedin.com)
4553.
An Interactive State Machine Demo (drakonhub.com)
4554.
Blowing Up: How This One Fund Blew Up Overnight – And What We Can Learn from It (palisade-research.com)
4555.
What Constant Surveillance Does to Your Brain – Motherboard (motherboard.vice.com)
4556.
Sorry Linux Kubernetes is now the OS that matters (infoworld.com)
4557.
Why ICE is sending out notices with fake court dates (news.vice.com)
4558.
College Students Spend $141B per Year on College Costs (Visualization) (theclassroom.com)
4559.
Ask HN: Why there are no cryptographic bolt-seals?
4560.
I ditched the Mac for the iPad, and I’ll never go back (fastcompany.com)