January 2016 Archive
8521.
“Devtool” – Debug Node.js in Chrome DevTools (github.com)
8522.
The Pedigree in Silicon Valley Privilege (medium.com)
8523.
How the artificial intelligence revolution was born in a Vancouver hotel (business.financialpost.com)
8524.
Where Twitter's execs went to (dcinno.streetwise.co)
8525.
Science: your body odor reveals when you are sick (pjmaurel.tumblr.com)
8526.
Ethereum price has increased ~2.5x over the past 7 days (coinmarketcap.com)
8527.
H-1B Worker Takes Suit Against CGA Law to High Court (law360.com)
8528.
One in five American adults is an Amazon Prime member (usatoday.com)
8529.
The Atlas of Beauty: North Korea (maptia.com)
8530.
His essay on Income Inequality,Paul Graham credited me for- -feedback (medium.com)
8531.
How We Hacked the Media and Landed Six-Figure Contracts in Four Days (medium.com)
8532.
The Man Who Would Teach Machines to Think (theatlantic.com)
8533.
Theming with CSS custom properties
8534.
Why the calorie is broken (mosaicscience.com)
8535.
You can't split-test human experience You can’t split test human experience (justinjackson.ca)
8536.
Internal tools should be sold or killed (mdswanson.com)
8537.
Poll: What do you think of the current market downturn?
8538.
Minksy: “My career was based on cowardice” (webofstories.com)
8539.
Ask HN: What tools do you use to understand/tune JavaScript code?
8540.
Migrating to DynamoDB: A Zero Downtime Approach with Global Secondary Indexes (blog.runscope.com)
8541.
FBI ran website sharing thousands of child porn images (usatoday.com)
8542.
Consensus algorithms: paxos, raft, (yodaiken.com)
8543.
How I became a code ninja (startupmyway.com)
8544.
Quality is too important to be left to QA engineers (medium.com)
8545.
YC Summer 16 Applications open (apply.ycombinator.com)
8546.
Maths study shows conspiracies 'prone to unravelling' (bbc.com)
8547.
Not even the darkest minds imagined it would be this bad for China (yahoo.com)
8548.
How Trump Happened (graphics.wsj.com)
8549.
Wikipedia editors in no confidence vote (bbc.co.uk)
8550.
Forget Early Adopters: These People Are Happy to Be Late (wsj.com)