July 2019 Archive
271.
What If Life Did Not Originate on Earth? (newyorker.com)
272.
The First Sony Walkman Was Released 40 Years Ago (stereogum.com)
273.
Google AI Education Resources (ai.google)
274.
Apple Reports Declining Profits and Slowing Growth Again (nytimes.com)
275.
Foliate – A simple and modern GTK eBook viewer (github.com)
276.
Absence of certain features in IRC considered a feature (drewdevault.com)
277.
Japan approves first human-animal embryo experiments (nature.com)
278.
Show HN: Stein – Use Google Sheets as a No-Setup Database (steinhq.com)
279.
Alibaba partner announces 16 core RISC-V chip (caixinglobal.com)
280.
OpenBSD Is Now My Workstation (sogubsys.com)
281.
Burnout and the Brain (2016) (psychologicalscience.org)
282.
Let's talk about peeing in space (twitter.com)
283.
Seven Sketches in Compositionality: An Invitation to Applied Category Theory (arxiv.org)
284.
TinyGo: New Go Compiler Based on LLVM (tinygo.org)
285.
81% of 'suspects' flagged by Met's police facial recognition technology innocent (news.sky.com)
286.
Kriegspiel (en.wikipedia.org)
287.
“10x engineers”: Stereotypes and research (jasoncrawford.org)
288.
How I Became a Machine Learning Practitioner (blog.gregbrockman.com)
289.
Japan's Hayabusa2 probe makes second touchdown on distant asteroid (japantimes.co.jp)
290.
When a rewrite isn’t: rebuilding Slack on the desktop (medium.com)
291.
Pirate our games, don't buy them from key resellers, say indies (bbc.com)
292.
A personal story about 10× development (nibblestew.blogspot.com)
293.
Composable multi-threaded parallelism in Julia (julialang.org)
294.
When Can I Reuse This Calendar? (whencanireusethiscalendar.com)
295.
7.1 magnitude earthquake strikes Southern California (latimes.com)
296.
A friendly web development tutorial for complete beginners (2017) (internetingishard.com)
297.
Learning Golang – From Zero to Hero (milapneupane.com.np)
298.
User Inyerface – A worst-practice UI experiment (userinyerface.com)
299.
Fork: A fast and friendly Git client for Mac and Windows (fork.dev)
300.
Safer Nuclear Reactors Are on the Way (scientificamerican.com)