2019 Archive
18061.
World's richest 10% produce half of global carbon emissions (2015) [pdf]
(www-cdn.oxfam.org)
18062.
18063.
Targeted ads are one of the world's most destructive trends
(theguardian.com)
18064.
Rustic Shelters Called Bothies
(nytimes.com)
18065.
18066.
Cone Programming Langauge
(cone.jondgoodwin.com)
18067.
Advocacy groups are pushing the FTC to break up Facebook
(theverge.com)
18068.
Dell E7440 and E7240 Hackintosh
(github.com)
18069.
The Myth of a Wilderness Without Humans
(thereader.mitpress.mit.edu)
18070.
18071.
18072.
IBM Adds POWER9 AIO, Pushes for an Open Memory-Agnostic Interface
(fuse.wikichip.org)
18073.
Don’t Lead by Example
(medium.com)
18074.
Most of the Mind Can’t Tell Fact from Fiction
(nautil.us)
18075.
A Solar Power Plant designed to deliver 100% of the electricity after sunset
(pv-magazine-usa.com)
18076.
18077.
Photograph Your Work
(etbe.coker.com.au)
18078.
18079.
Long, Pointy Shoes in Medieval Fashion
(atlasobscura.com)
18080.
Show HN: Consider Groups – Like Slack Channels for Email
(consider.co)
18081.
A predicted superconductor might work at a record-breaking 200° Celsius
(sciencenews.org)
18082.
Asterisk 17
(mail-archive.com)
18083.
US government is entitled to all Snowden book proceeds, judge rules
(arstechnica.com)
18084.
18085.
Nasa proves its space helicopter can fly on Mars
(engadget.com)
18086.
Marcus Hutchins Stopped WannaCry – He Deserves a Pardon
(nytimes.com)
18087.
Night of a cascading failure
(rachelbythebay.com)
18088.
I Was the Fastest Girl in America, Until I Joined Nike
(nytimes.com)
18089.
Caffeine Cranks Up Solar Cells
(spectrum.ieee.org)
18090.
The Machine Stops
(newyorker.com)