July 2016 Archive
5491.
The fanatics of online video are growing the pie (medium.com)
5492.
City who enthusiastically fixed their curb asked to curb their enthusiasm (npr.org)
5493.
Apache Hbase for the win: all the ways which it's bad–and why it's still great (dynamicyield.com)
5494.
Apple drops to 5th place in China's smartphone market (techinasia.com)
5495.
Building a multi-service geolocation system (blog.garage-coding.com)
5496.
Securing a travel iPhone (blog.filippo.io)
5497.
Programming Language Checklist (colinm.org)
5498.
6 months with Elixir and Phoenix (elviovicosa.com)
5499.
Show HN: Blake2b with SIMD instructions in Go (blog.minio.io)
5500.
Controlling Philips Hue Lights with a Hololens (blog.htmlfusion.com)
5501.
Are Face Recognition Systems Accurate? Depends on Your Race (technologyreview.com)
5502.
Biologists have recreated life inside a computer (pbs.org)
5503.
No company is going to own IoT, so please stop trying (losant.com)
5504.
“This is the brain on horror”: the incredible calm of Diamond 'Lavish' Reynolds (washingtonpost.com)
5505.
GmailMeter – Gmail and Google Apps Inbox Analytics
5506.
The Secret Sauce of Envoy Passport Stamp Images (envoy.engineering)
5507.
Mybridge 2.0: Top articles for your professional skills (#1 on Product Hunt) (mybridge.co)
5508.
Simple Blocks Based DSL, Complex Natural Motion Animations (iOS CoreAnimation) (github.com)
5509.
Show HN: Doorman – Tools to make Elixir authentication simple and flexible (github.com)
5510.
VS Code now with Tabs (code.visualstudio.com)
5511.
What are 20 lines of code that capture the essence of Haskell? (quora.com)
5512.
Dendrites and Wrongs (mindtribe.com)
5513.
Tabbed Editor Support in Visual Studio Code (code.visualstudio.com)
5514.
Literate programming: presenting code in human order (johndcook.com)
5515.
How Long Do Software Engineers in San Francisco Bay Area Stay on a Job? (hackerlife.co)
5516.
9 Innovations That Could Become the Next “Big Thing” (medium.com)
5517.
Old School Color Cycling with HTML5 (effectgames.com)
5518.
Symantec and Norton Security Products Contain Critical Vulnerabilities (us-cert.gov)
5519.
As We May Think by Vannevar Bush (1945) (theatlantic.com)
5520.
Wendy's hack was bigger than thought and exposed credit card data (computerworld.com)