December 2015 Archive
8281.
Nodejs: Dangerous use of express 'body-parser' module (fosterelli.co)
8282.
Mono's DNS is broken (blog.feld.me)
8283.
Brazilian Judge Lifts Ban on Facebook’s WhatsApp (wsj.com)
8284.
GHCQ Holiday Puzzle (schneier.com)
8285.
Our Berkeley Data Science Capstone Project: Rap Analysis (datasciencecentral.com)
8286.
Updated Unicode / LaTeX page (johndcook.com)
8287.
Ditching Scrum for Kanban – The best decision we’ve made as a team (medium.com)
8288.
React Components, Elements, and Instances (facebook.github.io)
8289.
2016 Model X Emergency Response Guide [pdf] (teslamotors.com)
8290.
Animals think, therefore (economist.com)
8291.
On choosing the Z80 over the 6502 (2014) (luke.maurits.id.au)
8292.
Google Pixel C Review (youtube.com)
8293.
Cards Against Humanity gives its entire Chinese workforce a holiday (theguardian.com)
8294.
Wealthiest 20 people own more wealth than half the American population (ips-dc.org)
8295.
YC's 2015 Reading List (themacro.com)
8296.
Debian LTS drops security support for VirtualBox (lists.debian.org)
8297.
Why Mother Teresa is still no saint to many of her critics (washingtonpost.com)
8298.
Gusto raises $50M and boasts 25,000 customers (venturebeat.com)
8299.
OpenAI won't benefit humanity without data-sharing (theguardian.com)
8300.
How my male coworkers have been effective allies against tech industry misogyny (leahweitz.com)
8301.
How the first Stormtrooper costumes were made (originalstormtrooper.com)
8302.
Sony Developing Sulfur Smartphone Batteries with 40% Higher Energy Density (hothardware.com)
8303.
Silicon Valley's cash party is coming to an end (cnbc.com)
8304.
BlockSeer: Follow the Bitcoin (blockseer.com)
8305.
University of Alabama quietly testing fraternity brothers for drugs (al.com)
8306.
A new generation of ransomware (2014) (securelist.com)
8307.
An Alien God (2007) (lesswrong.com)
8308.
What do security certificates actually do? (duck.co)
8309.
Sony plans to boost battery performance 40 percent by 2020 (extremetech.com)
8310.
Mars Rover Finds Changing Rocks, Surprising Scientists (nytimes.com)