November 2019 Archive
1141.
Organice – Using Org mode from a smartphone or browser [video] (youtube.com)
1142.
Upgrading Messaging on Android in the U.S. with RCS (blog.google)
1143.
The U.S. could slash health-care costs with two fundamental changes (marketwatch.com)
1144.
Illusory Truth Effect (en.wikipedia.org)
1145.
Russia Has ‘Oligarchs,’ the US Has ‘Businessmen’ (fair.org)
1146.
Million Short (millionshort.com)
1147.
How Cybercriminals Profit by Tapping Your Email (easydns.com)
1148.
The Linear Algebra Mapping Problem (arxiv.org)
1149.
V-Mail (en.wikipedia.org)
1150.
Trends in the San Francisco (mostly dog?) poop crisis (renthop.com)
1151.
Show HN: Notimeforbooks.com – Read a book, one page at a time, in your inbox (notimeforbooks.com)
1152.
Ransomware, Data Breaches at Hospitals Tied to Uptick in Fatal Heart Attacks (krebsonsecurity.com)
1153.
Lightweight API Design in Swift (swiftbysundell.com)
1154.
Instagram’s Explore Recommender System (instagram-engineering.com)
1155.
Senate Considers Banning Dial Phones (1930) (senate.gov)
1156.
Open-sourcing Clusterman, a cluster autoscaler for Kubernetes and Mesos (engineeringblog.yelp.com)
1157.
A History of APL in Fifty Functions (2016) (jsoftware.com)
1158.
Shields.io: Quality metadata badges for open source projects (shields.io)
1159.
LLVM-tutor: collection of out-of-tree LLVM examples for teaching and learning (github.com)
1160.
The Swedish phoneme notorious for having a dedicated IPA symbol, /ɧ/ (2016) (possessivesuffix.tumblr.com)
1161.
Apple Antitrust Probe – Responses to Congress [pdf] (docs.house.gov)
1162.
USS Pueblo (en.wikipedia.org)
1163.
Ogre 1.12.3 (ogre3d.org)
1164.
We Need to Map the Ocean Floor (nautil.us)
1165.
An Attempt to Recreate the Blender 2.8 ToolBox in Qt5 (github.com)
1166.
Wait Wait Tell Me: The Psychology of Loading Screens (99percentinvisible.org)
1167.
The plot thickens for a hypothetical “X17” particle (home.cern)
1168.
The Case Against Boeing (newyorker.com)
1169.
“That Deep Romantic Chasm”: Libertarianism and the Computer Culture (1999) (uvm.edu)
1170.
SpaceX and Boeing Still Need a Parachute That Always Works (wired.com)