October 2016 Archive
1951.
Berkeley Protesters Built a Human Wall to Violently Stop White Students (reason.com)
1952.
What’s really going on in PTSD brains? (psypost.org)
1953.
How German nuclear scientists reacted to the news of Hiroshima (lukemuehlhauser.com)
1954.
How Twitch Uses PostgreSQL (blog.twitch.tv)
1955.
Resisting the Urge to Profess (chronicle.com)
1956.
Secure Messaging Scorecard (eff.org)
1957.
Proposing an Incremental Java EE Roadmap (johnclingan.com)
1958.
At the World's First Cybathlon, Proud Cyborg Athletes Raced for the Gold (spectrum.ieee.org)
1959.
Wikileaks releases pre-commitment hashes after Assange's Internet has been cut (twitter.com)
1960.
1961.
How Uber Plans to Conquer the Suburbs (buzzfeed.com)
1962.
Getting Started with Docker for Windows (docs.docker.com)
1963.
Whether You’re a Democrat or Republican, Your Social Media Is an Echo Chamber (nautil.us)
1964.
iMessage Preview Problems; leak your location by receiving a text message (theantisocialengineer.com)
1965.
Turkish government banned dropbox for hiding this torrent. please fork (github.com)
1966.
Ask HN: Why aren't programmers unionized?
1967.
The Fatal Mistake That Doomed Samsung’s Galaxy Note (wsj.com)
1968.
AI ‘judge’ can predict court verdicts with 79 per cent accuracy (telegraph.co.uk)
1969.
Ask HN: Is discussion of wikileaks not allowed?
1970.
Believe it or not, the bees are doing just fine (washingtonpost.com)
1971.
FBI reopens investigation of emails from Clinton’s private server (washingtonpost.com)
1972.
Peter Thiel Trump Speech (youtube.com)
1973.
Ask HN: Why aren't botnet-fodder vendors' names (XiongMai, Dahua) in the news?
1974.
Lévi-Strauss, philosopher among the Indians (the-tls.co.uk)
1975.
Facebook, Instagram and Twitter Provided Data for Surveilling Activists of Color (aclunc.org)
1976.
Princeton Study: U.S. No Longer an Actual Democracy (2014) (talkingpointsmemo.com)
1977.
Apple demolished by Microsoft at PC events (marketwatch.com)
1978.
Twitch Plays Baxter (twitch.tv)
1979.
3 Rules for Rulers (youtube.com)
1980.
Gaming’s rarest systems and games can be found at this huge museum in Texas (arstechnica.com)