July 2019 Archive
1231.
Ask HN: How do you read and understand an open-source project?
1232.
Amazon Transcribe Streaming Now Supports WebSockets (aws.amazon.com)
1233.
Blender 2.80 (blender.org)
1234.
The Golden Girls Would Violate Zoning Laws (nytimes.com)
1235.
Scientists Are Giving Dead Brains New Life (nytimes.com)
1236.
Azolla Event (en.wikipedia.org)
1237.
Why Kids Invent Imaginary Friends (theatlantic.com)
1238.
Apple to include new keyboard in 2019 MacBook Air and 2020 MacBook Pro (9to5mac.com)
1239.
Why Has Language Changed So Much So Fast? ‘Because Internet’ (nytimes.com)
1240.
A Comscore Company Distributes a MITM Proxy Spyware Compromising Users Security (airoav.com)
1241.
OpenBGPD: The OpenBSD BGP internet routing daemon (openbgpd.org)
1242.
Alice and Bob: A History of the World’s Most Famous Cryptographic Couple (2017) (cryptocouple.com)
1243.
Notes on a Smaller Rust (boats.gitlab.io)
1244.
When Having Friends Is More Alluring Than Being Right (theferrett.com)
1245.
Value Is Dead, Long Live Value (osam.com)
1246.
Show HN: LessPhone – A minimal Android launcher to reduce phone use (lessphone.app)
1247.
Renters may get access to rogue landlord database (bbc.co.uk)
1248.
South African teens fly from Cape to Cairo in plane they assembled from kit (bbc.com)
1249.
Lefthook: Knock your team’s code back into shape (evilmartians.com)
1250.
Running the numbers on an insane scheme to save Antarctic ice (arstechnica.com)
1251.
Galileo navigation system facing service degradation or loss of signal (insidegnss.com)
1252.
x86 API Hooking Demystified (2012) (jbremer.org)
1253.
The Machine Stops (1909) [pdf] (ele.uri.edu)
1254.
Math versus Dirty Data (jeremykun.com)
1255.
Remembering Chris Kraft (nasa.gov)
1256.
Airlines are finally fixing the middle seat (fastcompany.com)
1257.
Netflix shares sink 10% as subscriber take-up slows (bbc.co.uk)
1258.
The U.S. Labor Market Isn’t All That Healthy (bloomberg.com)
1259.
How Microsoft made it harder to create Windows 10 local accounts (pcworld.com)
1260.
Space law is inadequate for the boom in human activity there (economist.com)