October 2019 Archive
901.
I got 40 paying customers in 6 months with 0 dollars spent (blog.pixelixe.com)
902.
Zen and the Art of Software Maintenance (sicpers.info)
903.
The effort to preserve a million letters written by U.S. soldiers during wartime (smithsonianmag.com)
904.
Git repository summary on your terminal (github.com)
905.
Learning to Predict Without Looking Ahead: World Models Without Fwd Prediction (learningtopredict.github.io)
906.
Is Death Reversible? (scientificamerican.com)
907.
We are on the cusp of a disruption in food and agricultural production (rethinkx.com)
908.
Duck Curve (en.wikipedia.org)
909.
Websites can change content inside a selection (bugzilla.mozilla.org)
910.
Really Fixing Getrandom() (lwn.net)
911.
FastSpark: A New Fast Native Implementation of Spark from Scratch (medium.com)
912.
A 3D Metal Printer Is Churning Out Rockets (spectrum.ieee.org)
913.
Boeing 2016 internal messages suggest employees may have misled FAA on 737 MAX (reuters.com)
914.
Why Graphiti? (graphiti.dev)
915.
OpenBSD Crossed 400k Commits (marc.info)
916.
Build your own dial up ISP in 2019 (dogemicrosystems.ca)
917.
Men View Their Ex-Partners More Favorably Than Women Do: Study (journals.sagepub.com)
918.
YouTube Regrets (foundation.mozilla.org)
919.
Nearly half of white Harvard students are athletes/children of alumni/donors (thedp.com)
920.
Voting machines pose a greater threat to our elections than foreign agents (thehill.com)
921.
The rise of the financial machines (economist.com)
922.
Ancient artifacts dislodged by climate change (smithsonianmag.com)
923.
Show HN: Slouch Stoppah (slouchstoppah.com)
924.
Driverless cars are stuck in a jam (economist.com)
925.
Signal Technology Foundation is now open for donations (freedom.press)
926.
How to Avoid Leaving Tracks Around the Internet (nytimes.com)
927.
Scientist Who Discredited Meat Guidelines Didn’t Report Past Food Industry Ties (nytimes.com)
928.
The boy behind the biggest coin-op conversion of the 80s (eurogamer.net)
929.
Over twenty percent of cable TV bills are bogus fees, study says (vice.com)
930.
Software projects written in Haskell (serokell.io)