April 2017 Archive
2941.
He was fired after writing this article (hackernoon.com)
2942.
Nintendo Announces New 2DS XL (theverge.com)
2943.
Physicists observe 'negative mass' (bbc.com)
2944.
Musk Teases Tesla Simi (electrek.co)
2945.
Ask HN: AI winter coming in next few years for AGI research?
2946.
Axon [formerly TASER] Offers Free Body Cameras for Every Police Officer in U.S (prnewswire.com)
2947.
Don’t document your code. Code your documentation (dev.to)
2948.
Show HN: Free and anonymous mock interviews for tech (interviewbit.com)
2949.
Gerrymandering Is Illegal, but Only Mathematicians Can Prove It (wired.com)
2950.
Pirate Bay Founder Launches Anonymous Domain Registration Service (torrentfreak.com)
2951.
30 cities where everyone under 30 wants to live right now (uk.businessinsider.com)
2952.
Uber tracked iPhone users after they deleted the app (cnbc.com)
2953.
Creators Admit Unix/C Are a Hoax (gnu.org)
2954.
Show HN: CodeSandbox – A React editor built for easy sharing and reusability (codesandbox.io)
2955.
Show HN: Take any HTML and plug it into native app with JSON markup (jasonette.com)
2956.
Tell HN: Happy Easter
2957.
YC Results Today
2958.
A new report reveals Obama misled the public about a quiet giveaway to Iran (vox.com)
2959.
Bitcoin Becomes Legal Payment Option in Japan (yro.slashdot.org)
2960.
Scientists Just Figured Out How to Use Graphene to Make Seawater Drinkable (futurism.com)
2961.
Treating the Stone in 16th Century Wales (According to the Vicar of Gwenddwr) (recipes.hypotheses.org)
2962.
Litho: declarative framework for building efficient UIs on Android (github.com)
2963.
The Fourteen Who Forgot (buzzfeed.com)
2964.
My Nintendo Switch reverse engineering attempts (github.com)
2965.
Show HN: Form backend for AWS Lambda (formplug.me)
2966.
BeeWare project: A request for your help (pybee.org)
2967.
How do you know if it's a good time to fundraise? (goodwatercap.com)
2968.
Microsoft Acquires Open Source Kubernetes Startup Deis (wired.com)
2969.
Show HN: Learn Git 101 (yasoob.me)
2970.
How to change someone's mind, according to science (washingtonpost.com)