September 2015 Archive
8671.
CppCon 2015: Herb Sutter “Writing Good C++14 by Default” (youtube.com)
8672.
How to create a custom scheduler for Amazon ECS (aws.amazon.com)
8673.
Show HN: Parallel file utilities for petabyte scale file systems (github.com)
8674.
Turbocharging your Mesos cluster with oversubscription – Mesosphere (mesosphere.com)
8675.
Neurotic Neurons: An Interactive Explanation (ncase.me)
8676.
Living in a Code Yellow World (schneier.com)
8677.
Sentry cofounder lecture on bootstrapping an open source startup (youtube.com)
8678.
A user’s manual: what is pornography doing to youngsters’ minds? (economist.com)
8679.
On Acceptable Ads (murphyapps.co)
8680.
Building a Hacker News Client with Facebook's Relay (medium.com)
8681.
Police Program Aims to Pinpoint Those Most Likely to Commit Crimes (nytimes.com)
8682.
iOS 9 Core Data Unique Constraints (blog.zachorr.com)
8683.
VC Funds Becoming Much More Cautious, Investing at Slower Pace (blog.semilshah.com)
8684.
Show HN: Slic3r, a 3d printer tool (slic3r.org)
8685.
So how do Google's super-smart security folk protect their data? (theregister.co.uk)
8686.
Self-driving RV (blogs.law.harvard.edu)
8687.
Windows 10 IoT Core: Insider Preview and Starter Pack Now Available (ms-iot.github.io)
8688.
XKCD Graph Maker (xkcdgraphs.com)
8689.
Siberian Pirates (redcube.net)
8690.
Yes, Virginia, You Really Do Need a Schema Registry (confluent.io)
8691.
1,000 Sign-Ups Before Launching a Product (medium.com)
8692.
US will probe Google for anti-competitive Android behavior (engadget.com)
8693.
30 second arithmetic challenge (christianp.github.io)
8694.
Heroku Deflater: a gem that enables gzip compression for Rails apps on Heroku (github.com)
8695.
Cold, hard data: inside Facebook's Swedish hub near the Arctic Circle (theguardian.com)
8696.
One of the world's best-funded Bitcoin companies is running into trouble (trendspot.it)
8697.
A Critique of VC, Founders, and Tech (avc.com)
8698.
4 ways to tighten your designer–developer collaboration (blog.gemba.io)
8699.
Silicon Valley – still the capital of tech (bbc.com)
8700.
Nap desks (hellogiggles.com)