April 2017 Archive
9571.
Airline Overbooking isn't Evil (perspectives.mvdirona.com)
9572.
nnn – fast, free, friendly file browser (github.com)
9573.
Former Sysadmin Accused of Planting “Time Bomb” in Company's Database (bleepingcomputer.com)
9574.
Why Dwarf Fortress started killing cats (eurogamer.net)
9575.
Ask HN: What are your famous sentient robots from scifi?
9576.
Connect Your App to Multiple Messaging Channels with the W3C Open Standard (github.com)
9577.
Nintendo is discontinuing the NES Classic (mashable.com)
9578.
ZX Spectrum reboot project's Great Ormond Street charity cash questions (theregister.co.uk)
9579.
How long is your mobile app hot fix process?
9580.
By how many flights should an airline overbook? (corysimon.github.io)
9581.
Could it be time to deny white men the franchise? (huffingtonpost.co.za)
9582.
Update on DO's 4/11 outage (digitalocean.com)
9583.
NANOG: Network Automation with Salt and NAPALM [pdf] (nanog.org)
9584.
Moonbase Alpha (flickr.com)
9585.
Android Internals: Vol I. (made free by author after “Vault7” leak) (newandroidbook.com)
9586.
Like Twitter but Hate the Trolls? Try Mastodon (wired.com)
9587.
Strategy of “inconvenience” may be the best way to boost vaccination rates (arstechnica.com)
9588.
Tim Ferriss and the Rise of the Email Miser (calnewport.com)
9589.
Google Hire (hire.withgoogle.com)
9590.
Show HN: Angular Translate Json (github.com)
9591.
Show HN: Run cpp unit tests from Xcode and Visual studio GUI (github.com)
9592.
The Productivity Advantage of Serial Entrepreneurs (nber.org)
9593.
Why Delta Air Lines Paid Me $11,000 Not to Fly to Florida This Weekend (forbes.com)
9594.
Google Hire (hire.withgoogle.com)
9595.
The new Fedora Project mission statement (lwn.net)
9596.
Rise of private debt creates fears of a bubble (ft.com)
9597.
Italy court lifts block of Uber services in Italy (reuters.com)
9598.
Ask HN: What's a fair equity share to ask for dev co-lead of an internet startup
9599.
Understanding Money: Where Does It Come From? (shubhamjain.co)
9600.
The Compaq Deskpro 386-20 is the most powerful PC an executive can buy (nytimes.com)