March 2019 Archive
211.
OpenTTD Compiled to WebAssembly (milek7.pl)
212.
India Imposes Complete Ban on Solid Plastic Waste Imports (thewire.in)
213.
Google’s new voice recognition system works instantly and offline (Pixel only) (techcrunch.com)
214.
AT&T’s “5G E” is slower than Verizon and T-Mobile 4G, study finds (arstechnica.com)
215.
After 6 months of working fine, Tesla software update drives at barriers again (np.reddit.com)
216.
China's e-buses dent oil demand more than electric cars do (bloomberg.com)
217.
Ask HN: What made you change your mind about a programming language/paradigm?
218.
Elon Musk Tried to Destroy a Tesla Whistleblower (bloomberg.com)
219.
Reasons Not to Use Apple (2018) (stallman.org)
220.
Melatonin's Effect on Skin and Hair (thelri.org)
221.
ARM processors like A12X are nearing performance parity with desktop processors (reveried.com)
222.
JIT-Less V8 (v8.dev)
223.
Amsterdam's Plan: If You Buy a Newly Built House, You Can't Rent It Out (citylab.com)
224.
How random can you be? (expunctis.com)
225.
Serenity: x86 Unix-like operating system for IBM PC-compatibles (github.com)
226.
PagerDuty S-1 (sec.gov)
227.
Quake II RTX: Re-Engineering a Classic with Ray Tracing Effects on Vulkan (nvidia.com)
228.
Matrix 1.0 – Are We Ready Yet? (matrix.org)
229.
AirPods with Wireless Charging Case (apple.com)
230.
Linux 5.0 (lore.kernel.org)
231.
Common statistical tests are linear models (lindeloev.github.io)
232.
Dell Autism Hiring Program (jobs.dell.com)
233.
Vertically Scaling PostgreSQL (pgdash.io)
234.
I’m 14, and I quit social media after discovering what was posted about me (fastcompany.com)
235.
Slack enables customers to control their encryption keys in enterprise version (techcrunch.com)
236.
Gall's Law (en.wikipedia.org)
237.
Japan’s elaborate, colorful manhole covers (atlasobscura.com)
238.
A Kid Spent 9 Years Building a Detailed Paper Model of a Boeing Jet (2017) (ge.com)
239.
Burnout caused by chronic stress is widespread (washingtonpost.com)
240.
An “acoustic metamaterial” that can cancel 94 percent of sound (bu.edu)