June 2019 Archive
1411.
Underwater Drones Nearly Triple Data from the Ocean Floor (bloomberg.com)
1412.
We Have Four Years to Save Ourselves from Climate Change, Harvard Scientist Says (forbes.com)
1413.
Is the Immediate Playback of Events Changing Children’s Memories? (nytimes.com)
1414.
CP/Mish: open-source sort-of-CP/M distribution (cowlark.com)
1415.
Ancient Romans Used Molten Iron to Repair Streets Before Vesuvius Erupted (livescience.com)
1416.
A radio station that no one claims to run (2017) (bbc.com)
1417.
The vintage 74181 ALU chip: how it works and why it’s so strange (2017) (righto.com)
1418.
Peloton Confidentially Files Statement for Proposed IPO (prnewswire.com)
1419.
Reset C by GE Light Bulbs [video] (youtube.com)
1420.
Aphantasia (en.wikipedia.org)
1421.
To Fix the Social Sciences, Look to the “Dark Ages” of Medicine (thereader.mitpress.mit.edu)
1422.
RPM Packages Explained (fedoramagazine.org)
1423.
Visual Studio IntelliCode (dirkstrauss.com)
1424.
Backpage.com’s Vicious Battle with the Feds (wired.com)
1425.
Basque and Armenian share a baffling litany of words and grammatical elements (bbc.com)
1426.
No Brainer (2015) (rifters.com)
1427.
Unwittingly obfuscating the fact that you're not doing AI (breakitdownto.earth)
1428.
Dan Ingalls PARC Talk on Sanskrit and OCR (1980) [video] (vimeo.com)
1429.
F-35 hit with damning reports as Pentagon eyes full rate production (thedrive.com)
1430.
Traffic-busting $100B Bay Area tax plan taking shape (mercurynews.com)
1431.
The Race to Become the Beyond Meat of Fish (finance.yahoo.com)
1432.
Gmail scans, parses, analyzes and catalogs your email (easydns.com)
1433.
Linux support on Lenovo personal systems (lenovo.com)
1434.
A new census shows how a Brazilian favela works (economist.com)
1435.
Top search result for “Tiananmen Square” on China's top search engine Baidu (chinadaily.com.cn)
1436.
FBI Records: Bigfoot (1976) (vault.fbi.gov)
1437.
Ask HN: What to read after “Thinking in Systems”?
1438.
The technology industry is rife with bottlenecks (economist.com)
1439.
Gilbert U-238 Atomic Energy Lab Toy (1950-1951) (orau.org)
1440.
An artificially intelligent, open-source bionic leg (qz.com)