March 2016 Archive
1711.
Computational thinking, 10 years later (blogs.msdn.microsoft.com)
1712.
MRSA superbug's resistance to antibiotics is broken (newscientist.com)
1713.
The Mystery of the Phantom Page Turner (collectorsweekly.com)
1714.
Generating Factoid Questions with RNNs: The 30M Factoid Question-Answer Corpus (arxiv.org)
1715.
Historical Laundry Conundrum – Finding a Home for Shirts (ascii.textfiles.com)
1716.
Peermaps – Decentralized Maps (peermaps.github.io)
1717.
Timeless Programming Tools (flyingmachinestudios.com)
1718.
Rust Mutation Testing (llogiq.github.io)
1719.
Werkbank – the new table in the Sitterwerk Art Library [video] (vimeo.com)
1720.
Stellar Module Management – Install Your Node.js Modules Using IPFS (blog.daviddias.me)
1721.
Universal install script (xkcd.com)
1722.
Revamping GitHub's Subversion Bridge (githubengineering.com)
1723.
Bash aliases for different frameworks and tools (github.com)
1724.
A Step Forward in Parental Leave at Etsy (blog.etsy.com)
1725.
Buying groceries for rich people, I realized upward mobility is largely a myth (buzzfeed.com)
1726.
OneDrive reduces free tier from 15GB to 5GB (support.office.com)
1727.
Show HN: Turn GitHub Usernames into Emails (github.com)
1728.
Designing a Home Network for Hostile Devices (shkspr.mobi)
1729.
Chocolatey – package manager for Windows (chocolatey.org)
1730.
UsingQR – “Electronic” paper invoices using JSON and QR codes (people.skolelinux.org)
1731.
Peachpie – PHP Compiler to .NET, Part 2 (blog.peachpie.io)
1732.
Sub-processing with modern C++ (templated-thoughts.blogspot.com)
1733.
Project West Ford (en.wikipedia.org)
1734.
One Startup’s Journey Through Y Combinator or There and Back Again (medium.com)
1735.
More developers now use OS X than Linux (9to5mac.com)
1736.
Please, kill your darlings (blog.ikura.co)
1737.
Amazon bans the sale of rogue USB-C cables (techcrunch.com)
1738.
MIT Mathematician confirms: Israeli 10th-grader discovers new geometric theorem (israelhayom.com)
1739.
Ask HN: What books do you wish your manager would read?
1740.
To Test a Powerful Computer, Play an Ancient Game (1997) (nytimes.com)