October 2015 Archive
301.
X-Ray Scans Expose Chip-And-Pin Card Hack (wired.com)
302.
LibreSSL, and the new libtls API (openbsd.org)
303.
Terrorism is not about terror (gwern.net)
304.
Deploying a Django App with No Downtime (medium.com)
305.
Tor Messenger Beta: Chat Over Tor, Easily (blog.torproject.org)
306.
Unsupervised Feature Learning and Deep Learning Tutorial (deeplearning.stanford.edu)
307.
Thank HN: for helping me get traction with DuckDuckGo and Traction book – AMA
308.
Structural and semantic deficiencies in the systemd architecture (blog.darknedgy.net)
309.
Why police could seize a college student's life savings without charging him (vox.com)
310.
Introducing the Plex Media Player (blog.plex.tv)
311.
AngelList Announces $400M Early-Stage Fund (wsj.com)
312.
HAproxy in the era of Microservices (47ron.in)
313.
Lessons learned writing highly available code (medium.com)
314.
Laser Razor suspended by Kickstarter (bbc.com)
315.
A poetic vision of Paris’ crumbling suburban high rises (washingtonpost.com)
316.
A conversation with Sussman on AI and asynchronous programming (dustycloud.org)
317.
Piston – A modular game engine written in Rust (piston.rs)
318.
An Interactive Guide to Ambiguous Grammar (mcsweeneys.net)
319.
Differences Between Perl 5 and Perl 6 (design.perl6.org)
320.
Fantasy Sports Employees Bet at Rival Sites Using Inside Information (nytimes.com)
321.
Cmus – A Small Terminal Music Player (cmus.github.io)
322.
Kawkab Monospaced Arabic Font (makkuk.com)
323.
Federal appeals court says NSA phone metadata collection can continue (arstechnica.com)
324.
The Nightmare of Replacing a Battery on a Mac Laptop (photofocus.com)
325.
Paper is Dropbox's new vision for how teams can work together (engadget.com)
326.
Gigabytes of user data from hack of Patreon donations site dumped online (arstechnica.com)
327.
Social Anxiety (inessential.com)
328.
Use this instead of press releases (mbites.com)
329.
Seattle, in Midst of Tech Boom, Tries to Keep Its Soul (nytimes.com)
330.
The Era of Automatic Facial Recognition and Surveillance Is Here (forbes.com)