April 2017 Archive
1351.
High Performance TCP Proxy Server (partow.net)
1352.
Show HN: HtmlWasher – An HTML cleanup tool (htmlwasher.com)
1353.
Why Recorded/Playback Tests in Selenium Break (blog.automatedbrowsertesting.com)
1354.
Ruby vs Elixir – Panel discussion at Wroc_love.rb [video] (youtube.com)
1355.
Clac – A command-line, stack-based calculator with postfix notation (github.com)
1356.
Building a chatbot on Facebook Messenger with Ruby on Rails (tutorials.botsfloor.com)
1357.
How a weapon against war became a weapon against the web (theverge.com)
1358.
RubyMotion Moving Forward Under New Leadership (rubymotion.com)
1359.
Cooking Lessons (story.californiasunday.com)
1360.
What colour are your bits? (2004) (ansuz.sooke.bc.ca)
1361.
How an Episode of the Simpsons Is Made (2015) (theverge.com)
1362.
The Experimental Layout Lab of Jen Simmons (labs.jensimmons.com)
1363.
DSL Engineering: Designing, Implementing, Using Domain-Specific Languages (2013) [pdf] (voelter.de)
1364.
Torching the Modern-Day Library of Alexandria (theatlantic.com)
1365.
A Digital Archive of Amsterdam's Past (citylab.com)
1366.
Xenko Game Engine 2.0 released (xenko.com)
1367.
How Cars Get Named (atlasobscura.com)
1368.
Pavel Durov Has Unfriended Everyone (bloomberg.com)
1369.
FCC chair wants to replace net neutrality with "voluntary" commitments (arstechnica.com)
1370.
Crypto Tools for DevOps: Git-Crypt – Tozny (tozny.com)
1371.
Why Criminals Target Patient Data (protenus.com)
1372.
Does irrationality fuel innovation? (juliagalef.com)
1373.
The Kekulé Problem (nautil.us)
1374.
What Do Animals See in a Mirror? (2014) (nautil.us)
1375.
A Neural Parametric Singing Synthesizer (dtic.upf.edu)
1376.
Show HN: Deep learning visual search and data analytics (github.com)
1377.
Exploring 3-Move – A LambdaMOO inspired environment (bluishcoder.co.nz)
1378.
Towards a Universal Code Formatter through Machine Learning (2016) (arxiv.org)
1379.
Tax Scam Records: Artist discovers his songs were released by shadowy companies (dangerousminds.net)
1380.
My giant JavaScript Basics course is now live on YouTube. And it’s 100% free (medium.freecodecamp.com)