November 2019 Archive
151.
Simple-twitter: A bare-bones Twitter clone implemented in a single file (github.com)
152.
Machine Learning on Encrypted Data Without Decrypting It (juliacomputing.com)
153.
Nuclear energy is a vital part of solving the climate crisis (archive.is)
154.
Google AdWords charged me for clicks in Istanbul while location-targeting the US (medium.com)
155.
Microsoft REST API Guidelines (github.com)
156.
Ask HN: What are you thankful for?
157.
They Might Never Tell You It’s Broken (pointersgonewild.com)
158.
Show HN: Open-Source Alternative to Intercom, Drift, Zendesk, FreshChat (github.com)
159.
Google cancels TGIF weekly all-hands meetings (cnbc.com)
160.
The Ripe NCC Has Run Out of IPv4 Addresses (ripe.net)
161.
Recreation.gov (recreation.gov)
162.
Andrej Karpathy talks about how Tesla's NNs are structured and trained [video] (youtube.com)
163.
TypeScript 3.7 (typescriptlang.org)
164.
Pure CSS – Lace (diana-adrianne.com)
165.
Sir Rod Stewart reveals his epic model railway city (bbc.com)
166.
SSH Handshake Explained (gravitational.com)
167.
MacBook Pro 16" 2019 Teardown (ifixit.com)
168.
Comparing Parallel Rust and C++ (parallel-rust-cpp.github.io)
169.
How VCs Make Money (vcstarterkit.substack.com)
170.
Job loss predictions over rising minimum wages haven't come true (axios.com)
171.
Sacha Baron Cohen: Facebook would have let Hitler buy ads for 'final solution' (msn.com)
172.
The Bytecode Alliance: Building a secure, composable future for WebAssembly (hacks.mozilla.org)
173.
Show HN: Coscreen.co – a radically different remote collaboration tool (coscreen.co)
174.
The Siege of Gondor, Part I: Professionals Talk Logistics (acoup.blog)
175.
Ask HN: Who is hiring? (November 2019)
176.
An update on YC China (blog.ycombinator.com)
177.
Google's ‘Project Nightingale’ Gathers Personal Health Data on Millions (wsj.com)
178.
Google Fires Four Workers, Including Staffer Tied to Protest (bloomberg.com)
179.
Electron apps cannot be submitted to the Apple store (david.dev)
180.
Moto Razr 2019: A foldable smartphone with no display crease (arstechnica.com)