May 2016 Archive
1231.
A simple Vulkan Compute example (duskborn.com)
1232.
Dark money: London’s dirty secret (ft.com)
1233.
Show HN: Gitsome: A Git/Shell Autocompleter with GitHub Integration (github.com)
1234.
Show HN: Wsta – a CLI for working with WebSockets written in Rust (github.com)
1235.
Understanding caching in Postgres (madusudanan.com)
1236.
Another Study Finds Link Between Pharma Money and Brand-name Prescribing (propublica.org)
1237.
Cuckoo filters and their analysis (11011110.livejournal.com)
1238.
Astrophysics Source Code Library (ascl.net)
1239.
The 8000th Busy Beaver number eludes ZF set theory (scottaaronson.com)
1240.
No one wants yearly Android releases (zdnet.com)
1241.
Is grit the true secret of success? (theguardian.com)
1242.
HDD Shipments Down 20% in Q1 2016, Hit Multi-Year Low (anandtech.com)
1243.
Ask HN: Do you spend more time coding or debugging?
1244.
You can’t replace your face, says face recognition (blog.kaspersky.com)
1245.
Apple's forgotten virtual-reality project QuickTime VR (businessinsider.com)
1246.
Our Open and Autonomous Salary System (multunus.com)
1247.
R7RS-large kickoff, list membership, and voter registration process (groups.google.com)
1248.
Building Fast and Resilient Web Applications (igvita.com)
1249.
Cloud Native Computing Foundation Accepts Prometheus as Second Hosted Project (cncf.io)
1250.
Use of Formal Methods at Amazon Web Services (2014) [pdf] (research.microsoft.com)
1251.
Palo Alto considers subsidized housing for salary up to $250K (reuters.com)
1252.
Why didn't Common Lisp fix the world? (quora.com)
1253.
Please don't send me smart replies (engadget.com)
1254.
Thoughts on Business Insider (medium.com)
1255.
PieMessage: iMessage on Android (github.com)
1256.
‘Facebook is everything to us’: How Little Things grew to 50M users in 3 years (digiday.com)
1257.
US Equity crowdfunding is finally here: Steps to getting funded (venturebeat.com)
1258.
Strings and the CLR – A Special Relationship (mattwarren.org)
1259.
Geologists Find Clues In Crater Left By Dinosaur-Killing Asteroid (npr.org)
1260.
Evidence suggests that brain activity shifts to increase wisdom as we age (nautil.us)