October 2016 Archive
811.
Europe and Russia prepare for historic landing on Mars (nature.com)
812.
Fusion – One-stop prototyping service for PCBs (seeedstudio.com)
813.
The greatest role of Bill Murray’s life has been playing Bill Murray (washingtonpost.com)
814.
How to Write a Lisp Interpreter in Python (2010) (norvig.com)
815.
Towards deep symbolic reinforcement learning (blog.acolyer.org)
816.
How Goldman Sachs Lays People Off (bloomberg.com)
817.
New lower Azure pricing (azure.microsoft.com)
818.
Stripe in Japan (stripe.com)
819.
Measuring how bad Twitter is (brontecapital.blogspot.com)
820.
How I added 6 characters to Unicode (and you can too) (righto.com)
821.
Decap of a Cell Phone SIM card [video] (youtube.com)
822.
Cassidy Curtis's Marvelous Surface Drawings (1996) [pdf] (math.brown.edu)
823.
Ahead-of-Time Compilation (bugs.openjdk.java.net)
824.
Who Should a Startup Hire First? (shift.newco.co)
825.
Universities have turned over hundreds of patents to patent trolls (medium.com)
826.
Where are the Eyes is a program for detecting and mapping surveillance cameras (github.com)
827.
Category Theory for the Working Hacker [video] (infoq.com)
828.
Solvespace – parametric 2d/3d CAD (github.com)
829.
How we improved Kubernetes Dashboard UI in 1.4 for your production needs​ (blog.kubernetes.io)
830.
Sputtering Startups Weigh on U.S. Economic Growth (wsj.com)
831.
How privatization increases inequality (inthepublicinterest.org)
832.
Inside the Development of Light, the Tiny Digital Camera That Outperforms DSLRs (spectrum.ieee.org)
833.
How Apple Scaled Back Its Titanic Plan to Take on Detroit (bloomberg.com)
834.
How One Goldman Sachs Trader Made More Than $100M (wsj.com)
835.
Ask HN: How do you back up your site hosted on a VPS such as Digital Ocean?
836.
Strategies of Human Mating (2006) [pdf] (weimag.ch)
837.
Bryan Johnson invests $100M in Kernel to unlock the power of the human brain (techcrunch.com)
838.
“Why do you work in security instead of something more lasting?” (addxorrol.blogspot.com)
839.
Why I hate frameworks (2005) (discuss.joelonsoftware.com)
840.
A cheap 555-based Geiger counter (hackaday.com)