October 2015 Archive
1441.
Freeman Dyson on climate change, interstellar travel, fusion (theregister.co.uk)
1442.
How MindGeek transformed the economics of porn (fusion.net)
1443.
Study of protein folds adds to evidence that viruses are alive and ancient (kurzweilai.net)
1444.
How We Moved 34k Wired Pages to One Site (wired.com)
1445.
Faroo: Peer-To-Peer Web Search (faroo.com)
1446.
Students in Switzerland build a wheelchair that climbs stairs (venturebeat.com)
1447.
Pigshell: Shell for the web (pigshell.com)
1448.
The Nobel Prize in Literature 2015 (nobelprize.org)
1449.
Near-record strength El Niño still on track to bring a wet California winter (weatherwest.com)
1450.
Marvin Minsky Reflects on a Life in AI [video] (technologyreview.com)
1451.
The quest for Shadow of the Colossus' last big secret (2013) (eurogamer.net)
1452.
Tacit, a CSS Framework Without Classes (github.com)
1453.
Tiny Core Linux (tinycorelinux.net)
1454.
A curious result hints at the possibility dementia is caused by fungal infection (economist.com)
1455.
Neurological evidence for chaos in the nervous system is growing (2014) (nautil.us)
1456.
Even More Brainfuck Optimisations (wilfred.me.uk)
1457.
Fruit-sorting robot ‘will disrupt the industry’ (drivesncontrols.com)
1458.
Ask HN: Who wants to be hired? (October 2015)
1459.
Libertarian communism (libcom.org)
1460.
A new visa that will allow UK tech startups to hire entire teams (businessinsider.com)
1461.
A small British firm shows that software bugs aren't inevitable (2005) (spectrum.ieee.org)
1462.
NPAPI Plugins in Firefox (blog.mozilla.org)
1463.
Is Programming Poetry? (medium.com)
1464.
Chromecast + NFC (maxwellito.tumblr.com)
1465.
Table-top games are booming in the video-game age (economist.com)
1466.
The Messy Story Behind the Making of “Destiny” (kotaku.com)
1467.
Man Accused of Spoofing Some of the World's Biggest Futures Exchanges (bloomberg.com)
1468.
Transpose: A structured alternative to Evernote (transpose.com)
1469.
The assault on the pie chart (priceonomics.com)
1470.
MIT researchers use Wi-Fi to recognize people through walls (gizmodo.com)