May 2019 Archive
2161.
What to Do About Inequality (2012) (bostonreview.net)
2162.
Urban-Rural Divide in American Politics (nytimes.com)
2163.
Effects of a diet based on inulin-rich vegetables on gut health and nutrition (academic.oup.com)
2164.
Asian shops shun Huawei phone trade-ins on Google suspension worries (reuters.com)
2165.
Redesigning Trust: Blockchain for Supply Chains (weforum.org)
2166.
Clip shows misinformation still has a home on Facebook (bbc.com)
2167.
Why every cyclist needs a pool noodle (qz.com)
2168.
Pad Thai was invented by the Thai government (scmp.com)
2169.
Monsanto ordered to pay 2B dollars to couple with cancer (nytimes.com)
2170.
Don't share pictures of your kids online (iafrikan.com)
2171.
Lightening run-time code generation (wingolog.org)
2172.
Restoring Havana's neon (bbc.com)
2173.
Buttons on the Web: Placement and Order (medium.com)
2174.
Fabrix – A strongly-typed Node.js ecosystem (github.com)
2175.
Firefox 67 (mozilla.org)
2176.
Bing’s Not the Laughingstock of Technology Anymore (bloomberg.com)
2177.
ZeroSpeech Challenge 2019: TTS without T (zerospeech.com)
2178.
Unpaywall Journals (chrome.google.com)
2179.
Knit, Chisel, Hack: Building Programs in Guile Scheme (2016) [video] (youtube.com)
2180.
Physicist creates tennis-ball towers, including one made from 46 balls (physicsworld.com)
2181.
America just had its lowest number of births in 32 years, report finds (cnn.com)
2182.
Beyond Meat and Impossible Foods Are the Trans Fat Purveyors of Our Generation (twitter.com)
2183.
The rise of the sober bar (bbc.com)
2184.
Claims that breakfast is a health panacea may be unsupported (vox.com)
2185.
The antibiotic industry is broken (economist.com)
2186.
Binance moves $1.26B worth of Bitcoin for $125 in network fees (thenextweb.com)
2187.
The U.S. Debt Ceiling Expired on March 1 and Nobody Cared – But They Will (forbes.com)
2188.
What Happened to Hovertrains? (2018) [video] (youtube.com)
2189.
Drug Prices Will Soon Appear in Many TV Ads (nytimes.com)
2190.
Children describe technology that gives them a sense of ambiguity as 'creepy' (sciencedaily.com)