November 2018 Archive
301.
The Dangerous Fetishization of ‘Hustle Porn’ (melmagazine.com)
302.
A web-based mission control framework by NASA (github.com)
303.
From Nand to Tetris: Building a Modern Computer from First Principles (nand2tetris.org)
304.
Some Amazon employees bought NYC condos before news of HQ2 location emerged (thehill.com)
305.
Bringing the Android kernel back to the mainline (lwn.net)
306.
Programming Quotes (quotes.cat-v.org)
307.
OpenBSD on a Laptop (c0ffee.net)
308.
Microsoft Beats Amazon in 12-Month Cloud Revenue (forbes.com)
309.
China Steps Up Trade Secret Theft from US Companies (latimes.com)
310.
Show HN: Founders launching startups on Twitch (24hrstartup.com)
311.
Long-Awaited Study Results on Vitamin D and Fish Oil Supplements (npr.org)
312.
Why are tech companies making custom typefaces? (arun.is)
313.
Google accused of 'trust demolition' over health app (bbc.com)
314.
Daniel Kahneman on when to trust intuitive judgment (thinkadvisor.com)
315.
Prac­ti­cal Ty­pog­ra­phy (practicaltypography.com)
316.
Facebook reportedly discredited critics by linking them to George Soros (theguardian.com)
317.
South Koreans lock themselves up to escape prison of daily life (reuters.com)
318.
Tracking China's Muslim Gulag (reuters.com)
319.
Half of lonely people think no one will notice if something bad happens to them (thesun.ie)
320.
Starting a Business in Silicon Valley (tlalexander.com)
321.
We Regulate the Wrong Things (strongtowns.org)
322.
MemSQL is now free to use for databases with up to 128GB of RAM usage (memsql.com)
323.
Real-Time Noise Suppression Using Deep Learning (devblogs.nvidia.com)
324.
Uber Revenue Slows as Quarterly Loss Surges to $1.1B (bloomberg.com)
325.
Google, Facebook, and Amazon benefit from an outdated definition of “monopoly” (qz.com)
326.
Building a company is fucking hard (nvdk.co)
327.
The Matrix Cookbook (2012) [pdf] (math.uwaterloo.ca)
328.
Reasons to Fear Another ‘Great War’ (bloomberg.com)
329.
Why We Need Innovative Nuclear Power (blogs.scientificamerican.com)
330.
A new Venezuelan ID, created with China's ZTE, tracks citizen behavior (reuters.com)