October 2015 Archive
1351.
Map style changes on OpenStreetMap.org (blog.openstreetmap.org)
1352.
Humpback whales synchronize their songs across oceans (medium.com)
1353.
An open letter about the terms “F#” and “Visual F#” (blogs.msdn.com)
1354.
Understanding Andre the Giant, Wrestling’s Massive, Indefinable Contradiction (grantland.com)
1355.
What I Learned Reading the F# Source (andredublin.github.io)
1356.
Ask HN: Freelancer? Seeking freelancer? (October 2015)
1357.
Study is forcing economists to rethink high-deductible health insurance (vox.com)
1358.
IBM Gives the Chinese Government Access to Software Code (bloomberg.com)
1359.
The student who discovered water on Mars says it was a 'lucky accident' (bbc.co.uk)
1360.
What Old Age Is Really Like (newyorker.com)
1361.
How Windows 10 Rewrites OS Architecture: Battle of SKM and IUM [pdf] (alex-ionescu.com)
1362.
The Log-Structured Merge-Tree (LSM-Tree) (1996) [pdf] (citeseerx.ist.psu.edu)
1363.
Remote Mexican village uses solar power to purify water (news.mit.edu)
1364.
Programming in a Mad Max Wasteland (devblog.avdi.org)
1365.
A Beginner's Guide to the Synth (20khz.gizmodo.com)
1366.
Important Security Notice from Patreon (patreon.com)
1367.
Researchers find neural switch that turns dreams on and off in mice (news.berkeley.edu)
1368.
Save for Later: Bookmarking Apps and the Wish Economy (medium.com)
1369.
A $200M Shell Game in Seychelles (thedailybeast.com)
1370.
Software That Lasts 200 Years (2004) (bricklin.com)
1371.
Show HN: A curated list of great puzzles (github.com)
1372.
Prototypes vs. MVPs (pathsensitive.blogspot.com)
1373.
Computer Utopias (chrisnovello.com)
1374.
The Age of Infection (foreignpolicy.com)
1375.
Simple Sequential A/B Testing (evanmiller.org)
1376.
NASDAQ Acquires SecondMarket to Help Startups Sell Shares (techcrunch.com)
1377.
Russian Ships Near Data Cables Are Too Close for U.S. Comfort (nytimes.com)
1378.
Design Your Own Database (2004) [pdf] (dartmouth.edu)
1379.
Virtual Reality Basics (tomshardware.com)
1380.
There's a Lot We Don't Know About Ebola (npr.org)