October 2016 Archive
13921.
Kratom Gets Reprieve from Drug Enforcement Administration (npr.org)
13922.
OptiKey – Full computer control and speech with your eyes (github.com)
13923.
Third Data Server from the Sun (nautil.us)
13924.
Ask HN: Trustworthy computer security blogs
13925.
How Microsoft Used an Office Move to Boost Collaboration (hbr.org)
13926.
Here’s the fireproof box Samsung is sending out for Galaxy Note 7 returns (techcrunch.com)
13927.
F%#k you, startup world (medium.com)
13928.
Fuck You Startup World (medium.com)
13929.
How a unique approach to auto repair led to a new kind of shop software (techcrunch.com)
13930.
Tesla to provide plans for combined company before SolarCity merger vote (reuters.com)
13931.
Massimo Pigliucci on Living Like a Stoic (modernstoicism.com)
13932.
Wells Fargo boss John Stumpf steps down (bbc.com)
13933.
Show HN: Which news outlets share an audience (elmoregreen.com)
13934.
'The Simpsons' Predicted Yesterday's Nobel Prize in 2010 (hollywoodreporter.com)
13935.
Why the Cost of Living Is Poised to Plummet in the Next 20 Years (singularityhub.com)
13936.
Walking Simulators: The Digitisation of an Aesthetic Practice (digra.org)
13937.
Samsung's Galaxy Note 7 Recall Is an Environmental Travesty (motherboard.vice.com)
13938.
Beyond 'Flash Boys': Brad Katsuyama Q&A (bloomberg.com)
13939.
[Python-Ideas] INSANE FLOAT PERFORMANCE (mail.python.org)
13940.
Avi Wigderson’s “Permanent” Impact on Me (scottaaronson.com)
13941.
To Make Vaccines Anywhere, Just Add Water (theatlantic.com)
13942.
Microservices, DevOps and Operational Complexity (blog.netsil.com)
13943.
Communication is a technical skill (ultrasaurus.com)
13944.
Coldplay Xyloband Reverse Engineering (pvieito.com)
13945.
WWW: The Way We Were (kottke.org)
13946.
Typography for Developers (medium.com)
13947.
Piketty’s housing capital results: New US facts (voxeu.org)
13948.
Facebook Bug Bounty: $5M Paid in 5 Years (facebook.com)
13949.
Docs much bettter than internet or app-based symptoms checkers (sciencebulletin.org)
13950.
Court says yes to regulating cabbies, no to governing Uber drivers (arstechnica.com)