August 2018 Archive
841.
When You’re Hot, You’re Hot: Career Successes Come in Clusters (insight.kellogg.northwestern.edu)
842.
Apple’s $1T Milestone Reflects Rise of Powerful Megacompanies (nytimes.com)
843.
Lenovo’s new Yoga Book replaces the keyboard with an E Ink screen (theverge.com)
844.
A plea for lean software (1995) [pdf] (cr.yp.to)
845.
Exploring Error Handling Patterns in Go (8thlight.com)
846.
Lobste.rs (github.com)
847.
Full Ethereum blockchain now available as a BigQuery public dataset (cloud.google.com)
848.
A Mathematical Theory for Why People Hallucinate (quantamagazine.org)
849.
Porting SBCL to the RISC-V (christophe.rhodes.io)
850.
Italy’s famous dome is cracking, and muon imaging may help (arstechnica.com)
851.
The Real Deal About rel="me" (wiki.zegnat.net)
852.
The Git project selects SHA-256 as the next-gen hash function to migrate to (public-inbox.org)
853.
End Stock Buybacks, Save the Economy? (nytimes.com)
854.
Slack confirms it has raised $427M at a post-money valuation of over $7B (techcrunch.com)
855.
Labor Board Backs Startup Engineers Fired for Unionizing (wired.com)
856.
14-year-old boy uses legal quirk to run for Vermont governor (wpri.com)
857.
Show HN: Umbrella JS, a 2.5kb jQuery alternative (umbrellajs.com)
858.
Nuclear Weapons Nerds (gizmodo.com)
859.
The Raspberry Pi as a Stratum-1 NTP Server (satsignal.eu)
860.
After 60 Years, I-95 Is Complete (bloomberg.com)
861.
Smoking around the world (ourworldindata.org)
862.
Amazon is paying to tweet nice things about warehouse working conditions (businessinsider.de)
863.
Life as a bug bounty hunter (technologyreview.com)
864.
SurveyMonkey S-1 (sec.gov)
865.
Collaborate, but only intermittently, says new study (sciencedaily.com)
866.
We Discovered Helium 150 Years Ago. Are We Running Out? (nationalgeographic.com)
867.
Vietnam Going Solar After Nuclear Power Plants Shelved (investvine.com)
868.
Business writers, please stop comparing market value to GDP (cjr.org)
869.
Ai Wei Wei's Beijing Studio Destroyed by Chinese Authorities (npr.org)
870.
Clothing Britain’s Spies During World War II (daily.jstor.org)