August 2019 Archive
2521.
Riding in Cars with Jacques Lacan (nybooks.com)
2522.
TSA's Scanners Can't Figure Out Afros or Turbans, Guess Who's Getting Searched (techdirt.com)
2523.
Alarm over voter purges as 17m Americans removed from rolls in two years (theguardian.com)
2524.
Using Pop Science to Build the Perfect Workforce (thewalrus.ca)
2525.
Soft skills are as important, if not more important, than technical skills (medium.com)
2526.
Cops Are Giving Amazon's Ring Real-Time 911 Data (gizmodo.com)
2527.
Notes on “Camp” (1964) (faculty.georgetown.edu)
2528.
Animator Richard Williams has died (bbc.co.uk)
2529.
No, You Won’t Get It Done over the Weekend (medium.com)
2530.
Fish Cannon (2016) (99percentinvisible.org)
2531.
Laws of Locality: Where in your UI you should put certain controls (learnui.design)
2532.
Show HN: TabNine Local – deep code completion on your laptop (tabnine.com)
2533.
‎Today, 28 years ago Linus Torvalds announced Linux on comp.os.minix (groups.google.com)
2534.
Croup and ipecac in Anne of Green Gables (drkottaway.com)
2535.
Texas Might Have Accidentally Decriminalized Marijuana (gq.com)
2536.
Microsoft Admits Humans Listen to Skype and Cortana in Privacy Policy Update (vice.com)
2537.
We Have the Touch (blogs.sciencemag.org)
2538.
I've given up trying to talk to friends about how their privacy is being abused (old.reddit.com)
2539.
Porsche Unveils Taycan Interior (techcrunch.com)
2540.
Ask HN: Show your own blog/vlog
2541.
Tech companies ignore pleas on rail safety (politico.com)
2542.
List comprehensions across languages (2007) (langexplr.blogspot.com)
2543.
I don’t know what to do with life
2544.
How Did Paul Krugman Get It So Wrong? (2011) [pdf] (faculty.chicagobooth.edu)
2545.
Edward Snowden book coming out Sept. 17 (apnews.com)
2546.
I don’t hire Junior data-scientists (medium.com)
2547.
Why are there protests in Hong Kong? (bbc.com)
2548.
Yes, America Is Rigged Against Workers (nytimes.com)
2549.
Dev.to is scraping whoishiring posts to spam their platform (twitter.com)
2550.
Is Line Editing a Lost Art? (lithub.com)