January 2020 Archive
211.
What DoorDash pays, after expenses, and what’s happening with tips (payup.wtf)
212.
Major union launches campaign to organize video game and tech workers (latimes.com)
213.
The “No Code” Delusion (alexhudson.com)
214.
Health-records software pushed opioids to doctors in secret deal with drugmaker (bloomberg.com)
215.
Wine 5.0 (source.winehq.org)
216.
Google veterans: The company has become ‘unrecognizable’ (cnbc.com)
217.
Dynamic type systems are not inherently more open (lexi-lambda.github.io)
218.
Blink-Dev – Intent to Deprecate and Freeze: The User-Agent string (groups.google.com)
219.
“Why Using WhatsApp Is Dangerous“ (telegra.ph)
220.
Boeing employees mocked FAA in internal messages before 737 Max disasters (npr.org)
221.
People Who Are Obsessed with Success and Prestige (bennettnotes.com)
222.
Why I Quit Using Google (kylepiira.com)
223.
Google is finally killing off Chrome apps, which nobody really used (theverge.com)
224.
What’s wrong with computational notebooks? (web.eecs.utk.edu)
225.
The MTA is going after an Etsy artist over a New York subway map it didn’t make (vice.com)
226.
A Graph of Related Subreddits (anvaka.github.io)
227.
Ask HN: What are some interesting projects to reuse your old devices?
228.
Any way to find a lost Kindle inside a house? (ebooks.stackexchange.com)
229.
I2C in a Nutshell (interrupt.memfault.com)
230.
Coding Stories: Me vs. the VNC Guy (martinrue.com)
231.
Santa Cruz decriminalizes psychedelic mushrooms (abcnews.go.com)
232.
Mutexes are faster than Spinlocks (matklad.github.io)
233.
How to Corrupt a SQLite Database File (sqlite.org)
234.
Ask HN: Do you ever contact people who have had a positive impact on you?
235.
Rewriting m4vgalib in Rust (cliffle.com)
236.
Six works of Computer Science-Fiction (2015) (blog.fogus.me)
237.
Flutter vs. Other Mobile Development Frameworks: A UI and Performance Experiment (blog.codemagic.io)
238.
Linode launches free DDoS protection (linode.com)
239.
Clearview AI helps law enforcement match photos of people to their online images (nytimes.com)
240.
Wuhan seafood market may not be source of novel virus spreading globally (sciencemag.org)