February 2019 Archive
1801.
In Search of the Northern Lights (nytimes.com)
1802.
What happens when social media manipulation targets religious faith? (thedailybeast.com)
1803.
CSS-In-JS and Static Rendering (frontarm.com)
1804.
The map is not the territory (2015) (fs.blog)
1805.
Yoshua Bengio Worries About China's Use of AI (bloomberg.com)
1806.
Ask HN: Best textbooks for learning operating systems
1807.
We Can’t Have Efficiency, Good Incentives and No Deficit (medium.com)
1808.
Disco: Modern Session Encryption [pdf] (eprint.iacr.org)
1809.
State of Clojure 2019 Survey Results (clojure.org)
1810.
The Geography of the Odyssey (laphamsquarterly.org)
1811.
Hacker Surfing: Free Housing for Engineers and Designers Visiting SF (hackersurfing.com)
1812.
Show HN: HTML5 MMORPG – almost 7 years in the making (data.mo.ee)
1813.
A science lab in your pocket? (hackaday.com)
1814.
Finland basic income trial left people 'happier but jobless' (bbc.com)
1815.
Python Scripting – Beginner to Advanced (edyoda.com)
1816.
Uber Drivers discuss giving 1-star ratings to passengers who don't tip (uberpeople.net)
1817.
Ask HN: I want to build an electronic wearable, where do I start?
1818.
Using Gmail “Dot Addresses” to Commit Fraud (schneier.com)
1819.
Wanted: Cofounder for YC S19. Robotic Tunnel Delivery of Groceries/food/packages
1820.
Running an LED in reverse could cool future computers (phys.org)
1821.
Nuclear Waste Dumpsters in Massachusettes Are Costing Taxpayers a Fortune (bostonglobe.com)
1822.
Scalable Video Technology for AV1 Encoder (github.com)
1823.
Sheela-Na-Gigs: Women Adorning Britain's Churches (bbc.co.uk)
1824.
Humanity and Machine Learning [video] (a16z.com)
1825.
The Fatal Ensnaring of Dan DePew (nybooks.com)
1826.
A Database for the Edge of the Network (2015) [video] (youtube.com)
1827.
Robot Melts Its Bones to Change How It Walks (spectrum.ieee.org)
1828.
TS Eliot and the Pyramid of Organisational Knowledge (thehypertextual.com)
1829.
Visual Noises – Noise Algorithms Visualised in 1D and 2D (ramesaliyev.com)
1830.
A Lab Discovering DNA in Old Books (theatlantic.com)