October 2019 Archive
2191.
Creators Say They’ve Cracked YouTube’s Monetization Algorithm (ffwd.medium.com)
2192.
Study in mice explains how brain can turn pain signals up or down (nih.gov)
2193.
WeWork 'Accepts Takeover by Softbank' (bbc.com)
2194.
Ask HN: What are the top textbooks for data structures?
2195.
Lion-Man (en.wikipedia.org)
2196.
The Private Life of Lord Byron (theguardian.com)
2197.
Show HN: Virtual Card Read-Punch – Punch, Read, Execute Virtual Punch Cards (masswerk.at)
2198.
Show HN: Nexrender – Data-Driven Render Automation for After Effects (github.com)
2199.
The lies I told for insurance companies about 'Medicare for All' worked (nbcnews.com)
2200.
Nobel Prize: Lithium Ion Battery Creators Led a Revolution (bloomberg.com)
2201.
Real-space charge-density imaging with sub-angstrom resolution (nature.com)
2202.
Mind the Secret Bunker (laphamsquarterly.org)
2203.
A Beginner's Guide to Deep Reinforcement Learning (skymind.ai)
2204.
Calibrating your fear of big bad optimizing compilers (lwn.net)
2205.
Why We're Drawn into Darkness (nautil.us)
2206.
Spain will prevent “digital republic” in Catalonia (catalannews.com)
2207.
Murder by Rifle vs. Death by Meteor (charlespetzold.com)
2208.
Ask HN: Slack Alternatives?
2209.
Adult Day Cares in the Rio Grande Valley (texasobserver.org)
2210.
The Modular PC: Intel’s New Element Brings Project Christine to Life (anandtech.com)
2211.
Changing dynamics of the drug overdose epidemic in the US, 1979-2016 (science.sciencemag.org)
2212.
Tesla’s Summon-Your-Car Feature Spurs U.S. Safety Inquiry (bloomberg.com)
2213.
Ask HN: Chrome activating my microphone on OS X
2214.
The End of Oz (lareviewofbooks.org)
2215.
‘Israel’s ancient NYC’: 5k-year-old Canaanite megalopolis may rewrite history (timesofisrael.com)
2216.
Whois++ (en.wikipedia.org)
2217.
Announcing the Open Application Model (OAM) (cloudblogs.microsoft.com)
2218.
The Dark Side of Light (theatlantic.com)
2219.
Show HN: I co-wrote a book on training Deep Learning models in Go
2220.
Mark Zuckerberg still doesn't get it (newyorker.com)