2015 Archive
26011.
What's Lost When Most People Work from Home (theatlantic.com)
26012.
New York's Rent Regulation Fight (bbc.com)
26013.
How old are you based on your reactions? (justpark.com)
26014.
Being ‘wasted’ on Facebook may damage your credit score (ft.com)
26015.
Web's random numbers are too weak, researchers warn (bbc.co.uk)
26016.
Ask HN: How did people bake before thermometers?
26017.
In L.A., One Way to Beat Traffic Runs into Backlash (wsj.com)
26018.
Apple Watch Review: You’ll Want One, but You Don’t Need One (bloomberg.com)
26019.
Show HN: Highlander – Stop Overlapping Python Cron Jobs (github.com)
26020.
Ask HN: The best app to keep a work diary
26021.
366559 – Brotli Accept-Encoding/Content-Encoding (bugzilla.mozilla.org)
26022.
The Population Bomb? (retroreport.org)
26023.
Edward Snowden says it's your 'duty' to install ad blockers (mashable.com)
26024.
How can we fight online shaming campaigns? (scottaaronson.com)
26025.
Technical advances that could make wind power viable everywhere (arstechnica.com)
26026.
Ask HN: How many hours do you work?
26027.
The Coming Change in Monetary Policy (avc.com)
26028.
Jet.com Runs into Turbulence with Retailers (wsj.com)
26029.
Ask HN: What does the future hold for developers?
26030.
Why do MOOCS have low completion rates?
26031.
Why Today’s Automobile Industry Looks a Lot Like IBM in 1985 (techcrunch.com)
26032.
Threat to Detroit’s Rebound Is the Mortgage Industry (nextcity.org)
26033.
Ask HN: Am I the only one outraged by Twitter shutting down share counts?
26034.
College enrollment rates are dropping, especially among low-income students (washingtonpost.com)
26035.
Electric brain stimulation decreases IQ scores and racial prejudice (kurzweilai.net)
26036.
Google, Mighty Now, but Not Forever (nytimes.com)
26037.
Empire of Code – Space Strategy Game from CheckIO (checkio.org)
26038.
A black man walks into Silicon Valley and tries to get a job (medium.com)
26039.
New gadget on Indiegogo aims to kill roaming charges (cybershack.com.au)
26040.
Time for vinyl to get back in its groove after pressing times (theguardian.com)