April 2015 Archive
961.
How Coursera Competes for the Best Talent (firstround.com)
962.
Netflix algorithm tells you when your best employee is about to leave you (thestack.com)
963.
Netflix begins audio description for visually impaired (blog.netflix.com)
964.
The Internet of Kafkaesque Things (aclu.org)
965.
Memoize – a replacement for make relying on strace (github.com)
966.
Photon – Minimal Linux Container Host (vmware.github.io)
967.
Streamtools – A graphical toolkit for working with streams of data (nytlabs.github.io)
968.
Nice Downtowns: How Did They Get That Way? People Made Them (theatlantic.com)
969.
Debian elects new project leader, PPA support proposed (distrowatch.com)
970.
Why do women have periods when most animals don't? (bbc.com)
971.
Deploying ECMAScript 6 (2ality.com)
972.
Nagios vs Icinga: the story of one of the most heated forks in free software (freesoftwaremagazine.com)
973.
On the Great Filter, existential threats, and griefers (antipope.org)
974.
CloudFlare's New Dashboard (blog.cloudflare.com)
975.
Curated free-to-use space photography (peek.space)
976.
Code Inflation [pdf] (computer.org)
977.
Three.js – JavaScript 3D library (threejs.org)
978.
Paul's Extreme Sound Stretch (hypermammut.sourceforge.net)
979.
Experimental Australian scheme to eradicate long-term homelessness (theguardian.com)
980.
Probabilistic Models of Cognition (probmods.org)
981.
What the Deer Are Telling Us (nautil.us)
982.
Arduino TRE (arduino.cc)
983.
An open source status page system, for everyone (cachethq.io)
984.
VMware just created its first Linux OS and it's rubbish (lwn.net)
985.
Scientists Perturbed by Loss of Stat Tool to Sift Research Fudge from Fact (scientificamerican.com)
986.
Postmodern Ponzi Schemes: Empirical Analysis of High-Yield Investment Programs [pdf] (digitalrepository.smu.edu)
987.
The evolution of dog breeds (priceonomics.com)
988.
Building a 3D Printed Electric Jet Powered Snowboard (judegomila.com)
989.
How ZenPayroll processes billions of dollars in annual payroll (stackshare.io)
990.
Laser Scans of London Are a New Way to See the World (wired.com)