March 2019 Archive
9241.
How New Orleans’ skate scene became an unlikely home for outsiders (huckmag.com)
9242.
LLVM Numerics (blog.llvm.org)
9243.
Show HN: Road Trips in India (beta3.ingeenee.com)
9244.
Lunarcy: A Lunar Lander Written in Apple Logo (paleotronic.com)
9245.
Money Mondays: 3 Ways This Page Could Be Optimized to Generate More Sales (capitalandgrowth.org)
9246.
Reddit Bans Gory Subreddits After New Zealand Shooting (thedailybeast.com)
9247.
The worst job at MoviePass’s parent company is now open – Quartz (qz.com)
9248.
Why beating your phone addiction may come at a cost (theguardian.com)
9249.
Immune age is distinct from chronological age (nature.com)
9250.
Faster V8 Promises and Async Functions (v8.dev)
9251.
How to Hire a Developer for a Startup (hackerearth.com)
9252.
United Airlines takes down poster that revealed Apple is its largest client (9to5mac.com)
9253.
Beto O'Rourke's membership in a legendary hacking group (reuters.com)
9254.
C# 7.2 – Let’s talk about readonly structs (devsanon.com)
9255.
Ten Trends in Deep Learning NLP (blog.floydhub.com)
9256.
Matthew D. Green's 's wonderful Crypto analogies (twitter.com)
9257.
Awesome AI Fairness – GitHub Repo (github.com)
9258.
How 2D semiconductors could extend Moore's law (nature.com)
9259.
Tech's Moral Void [audio] (cbc.ca)
9260.
Justice: Yet Another Online Judge (github.com)
9261.
Strategies to Get More Traffic to Your Website (medium.com)
9262.
Just the Doc – Jekyll Theme for Documentation (pmarsceill.github.io)
9263.
Dwarf Fortress Is Coming to Steam (Because Its Developer Needs Healthcare) (kotaku.com)
9264.
The Sideways Tide (solipsys.co.uk)
9265.
Announcing the Mainnet Launch of the Cosmos Hub (blog.cosmos.network)
9266.
Obtain Public and Bank Holidays Programmatically (calendarific.com)
9267.
A product manager has to bring clarity to their team (leaninberlin.de)
9268.
Alternatives to Transistors (electronics.stackexchange.com)
9269.
Amazon is introducing private investors to high-risk startups (cnbc.com)
9270.
The College-Admissions Scandal and the Banality of Scamming (newyorker.com)