March 2016 Archive
5971.
Quay Container Image Security Scanner Powered by Clair 1.0 (blog.quay.io)
5972.
What believing in God does to your brain (independent.co.uk)
5973.
Acceleration of Deep Neural Network Training with Resistive Cross-Point Devices (arxiv.org)
5974.
Ikea: Let's Grow (ikea.com)
5975.
Competing with Platforms That Ignore the Law (hbr.org)
5976.
Crypt·o·phobe (cryptophobia.com)
5977.
Sta.li 0.0 ISO released (lists.suckless.org)
5978.
Ask HN: Why can't Apple sue CelleBrite for DMCA violation
5979.
Why the Apple IIgs was better than the first Macintosh (m.youtube.com)
5980.
CSS and Scalability (mrmrs.io)
5981.
Clickbait Generator (clickbaiter.herokuapp.com)
5982.
Intermediate Vim: Sessions (rkd.me.uk)
5983.
Tryilo: Online Peer to Peer Sharing Platform (tryilo.ie)
5984.
Beautiful Golden Ratio Coloring Book Raises $35k in Four Days (kickstarter.com)
5985.
Building web applications for complete beginners (icanbuildwebsites.com)
5986.
Show HN: How I built my connected smart shower (medium.com)
5987.
Digital Nomad: I’m Not Living the Dream (medium.com)
5988.
Bitcoin rival Ethereum climbed 1000% in 3 months, crossing $1B in value at times (nytimes.com)
5989.
Can we stop pretending the iPad represents the future of computing? (bgr.com)
5990.
A Hacker’s Guide to Bending the Universe (backchannel.com)
5991.
Show HN: Shaven 1.0.0 (adriansieber.com)
5992.
5 really outdated things that are still popular in Japan (techinasia.com)
5993.
PULPino: open-source microcontroller based on a 32-bit RISC-V core (github.com)
5994.
Hacker Says He Printed Anti-Semitic and Racist Fliers at Colleges Across U.S (nytimes.com)
5995.
Watch Paint Dry on Steam: circumventing the Valve game review process (medium.com)
5996.
Turkey demands suppression of German song mocking Erdogan (thelocal.de)
5997.
How an Army of Ocean Farmers Are Starting an Economic Revolution (medium.com)
5998.
Ask HN: Trademark infringement for rejected / awaiting response trademark
5999.
OpenBSD 5.9 released (early) (undeadly.org)
6000.
A tech startup for cops predicts future crimes (timeline.com)