October 2019 Archive
5731.
WeWork pulls thousands of phone booths out of service over formaldehyde scare (techcrunch.com)
5732.
SE Inc. Director of Public Q&A retweets bad-faith, misrepresentative tweet (meta.stackexchange.com)
5733.
Python 3.8.0 is now available (pythoninsider.blogspot.com)
5734.
Serverless Deployment Best Practices (serverless.com)
5735.
Write You a Haskell: Building a modern functional compiler from first principles (dev.stephendiehl.com)
5736.
College admissions offices rank prospects before they apply (washingtonpost.com)
5737.
OnionShare makes it easy for anyone to publish anonymous, uncensorable websites (blog.torproject.org)
5738.
Information overload in group communication (royalsocietypublishing.org)
5739.
Facebook's Libra support shrinks even further as Priceline owner jumps ship (itnews.com.au)
5740.
Native Land Map (native-land.ca)
5741.
Tencent Cancels ESPN Basketball Show After Host “Likes” Hong Kong Tweet (deadspin.com)
5742.
Show HN: Maildrop.cli an Unofficial CLI for Maildrop.cc (github.com)
5743.
Gitlab Customer Acceptance Policy (gitlab.com)
5744.
The Best Product? A Great Team (community.intelligentfanatics.com)
5745.
Interview: Chris Gannon on Pushing the Limits with Lottie (lottiefiles.com)
5746.
Is GraphQL Still Relevant in an HTTP2 World? (medium.com)
5747.
Without encryption, we will lose all privacy. This is our new battleground (theguardian.com)
5748.
Decentralized Ride Sharing: A Demo (tupelo.org)
5749.
Secure Self Service Kafka Portal with Namespaces+Top Security Features (lenses.io)
5750.
The Google Pixel 4 Phone (blog.google)
5751.
Hong Kong Protesters Are Targeting Starbucks. Apple Could Be Next (nytimes.com)
5752.
How Amazon.com moved into the business of U.S. elections (reuters.com)
5753.
EFF Today: Tell Congress Not to Pass Another Bad Copyright Law (eff.org)
5754.
Lifesaving Coast Guard Scientist Reflects on Government Service (bloomberg.com)
5755.
Apple's Long, Bumpy Road to Hollywood (hollywoodreporter.com)
5756.
Better privacy and more flexibility with Nest devices (blog.google)
5757.
Deep Systems Broke Observability (lightstep.com)
5758.
Mind-reading technology is everyone's next big security nightmare (zdnet.com)
5759.
Ergotism (en.wikipedia.org)
5760.
Are China's Tantrums Signs of Strength or Weakness? (theatlantic.com)