February 2016 Archive
1651.
When to stop dating and settle down (washingtonpost.com)
1652.
An Open Letter to Millennials Like Talia… (medium.com)
1653.
Baltimore psychologist pioneers team using psychedelics as ‘sacred’ medicine (theguardian.com)
1654.
Greek startups to look out for in 2016 (eu-startups.com)
1655.
Anti-bullying program focused on bystanders helps students who need it most (sciencedaily.com)
1656.
The blessing and curse of people who never forget (bbc.com)
1657.
Long-Lost Mozart-Salieri Collaboration Found in Prague (abc.net.au)
1658.
Four Solutions to a Trivial Problem [video] (youtube.com)
1659.
The master, the expert, the programmer – Zed Shaw (zedshaw.com)
1660.
Conditional instructions in the ARM1 processor, reverse engineered (righto.com)
1661.
Pixel interpolation methods in ImageMagick (2004) (imagemagick.org)
1662.
Let's add a statistical profiler to Chicken Scheme (more-magic.net)
1663.
The Retrade (feld.com)
1664.
Will the Push for Coding Lead to ‘Technical Ghettos’? (theatlantic.com)
1665.
Jobs that are disappearing thanks to robots (businessinsider.com)
1666.
Giphy Closes $55M Series C at a $300M Post-Money Valuation (techcrunch.com)
1667.
The Fine Bros abandon attempt to license reaction videos after criticism (theverge.com)
1668.
Can You Fall in Love with Someone Through Text Message? (venngage.com)
1669.
Loop Invariants (cs.miami.edu)
1670.
Aereo Founder’s New Startup Wants to Bring You Wi-Fi–And Cut Out the Providers (wired.com)
1671.
Kuhn's Paradox (ebb.org)
1672.
Ask HN: DO You Use AWS Lambda? Why? Why Not?
1673.
The Most Detailed Analysis of Burger King Selling Hot Dogs You’ll Ever Read (wired.com)
1674.
Dark Pools Turned Out to Be Really Murky (bloombergview.com)
1675.
Show HN: Polly: A templating language for Rust (gitlab.com)
1676.
BBC Domesday Project (en.wikipedia.org)
1677.
Mattel Is Using 3D Printing to Resurrect an Old Hit (fortune.com)
1678.
D.C. accidentally uploads private data of 12,000 students (washingtonpost.com)
1679.
The Kafkaesque Battle of Soulseek and PayPal (eff.org)
1680.
Why you should side with Apple, not the FBI, in the San Bernardino iPhone case (washingtonpost.com)