March 2019 Archive
16921.
Superior Testing: Check Your Checks (arturdryomov.online)
16922.
Jokeroo Ransomware Calling Upon Hackers to Join Its Affiliate Program (cybarrior.com)
16923.
The Matrix at 20: how the sci-fi gamechanger remains influential (theguardian.com)
16924.
A line-printer Snoopy calendar in C++ (vrichard86.wordpress.com)
16925.
Commercial Sushi-Making Machine (youtube.com)
16926.
India's Anti-Satellite Test Wasn't About Satellites (wired.com)
16927.
Is the deconvolution layer the same as a convolutional layer? (theailearner.com)
16928.
Could ‘alcosynth’ provide all the joy of booze – without the dangers? (theguardian.com)
16929.
The First Church of Artificial Intelligence (2017) (wired.com)
16930.
Norsk Hydro cyber attack cost estimates up to $41m (computerweekly.com)
16931.
BC government granted $428K to group that spreads anti-vaccine claims since 2007 (cbc.ca)
16932.
Proxy raises $13.6M to unlock anything with Bluetooth identity (techcrunch.com)
16933.
What don’t they tell you about capitalism? (quora.com)
16934.
Ethereum Flavored WebAssembly (Ewasm) (github.com)
16935.
See an Emergency Crew's Shocking Way of Extinguishing a Fiery BMW I8 (thedrive.com)
16936.
Facebook’s Ad and Data-Mining Practices Encourage Housing Bias, U.S. Says (nytimes.com)
16937.
More S1 Fun (avc.com)
16938.
Google's AI Advisory Council Remains a Secret (forbes.com)
16939.
Big data biz Palantir scoops US Army contract worth up to $800m (theregister.co.uk)
16940.
The EMPire Strikes Back (foreignpolicy.com)
16941.
What beginner's mind is like (robertheaton.com)
16942.
Practical GraphQL and Micro-Service Architeture (engineering.globality.com)
16943.
Corrupted Blood Incident (en.wikipedia.org)
16944.
Chaos Engineering with the GraphQL API (blog.newrelic.com)
16945.
Simple, Complicated, and Complex Systems (feld.com)
16946.
Stunningly Beautiful Footage of the Falcon 9 (glitchmind.com)
16947.
Afl-Ruby: fuzz your Ruby programs using afl (robertheaton.com)
16948.
Remote Work Is Exploding: 10 Tools to Leverage It (blog.standups.io)
16949.
Kickstarter used metrics to prove how much legacy code slowed them down (g.codeclimate.com)
16950.
Asus was warned of hacking risks months ago, thanks to leaky passwords (techcrunch.com)