May 2016 Archive
2311.
Do You Love Music? Silicon Valley Doesn’t (nytimes.com)
2312.
Higher Taxes Don’t Cause Millionaires to Flee Their Homes (bloomberg.com)
2313.
Peter Thiel's dangerous blueprint for perverting philanthropy (fusion.net)
2314.
Cal Flyn: the terrible truths in my family history (theaustralian.com.au)
2315.
How Kosovo Was Turned into Fertile Ground for ISIS (nytimes.com)
2316.
Ask HN: Why do US companies mostly hire remote workers in USA?
2317.
407,000 Workers Stunned as Pension Fund Proposes 60% Cuts (money.cnn.com)
2318.
WhatsApp encryption is useless (wccftech.com)
2319.
Paul Graham on Uber and Lift Ban in Austin (twitter.com)
2320.
JavaScript Cancelable Promises Proposal (docs.google.com)
2321.
The Death of “Free” Software or How Google Killed GPL (linkedin.com)
2322.
Show HN: LoadJS – A tiny async loader for modern browsers (github.com)
2323.
What does the future hold? – Voxel Quest (voxelquest.com)
2324.
What I Learned From an Unsuccessful Launch (sungwoncho.io)
2325.
On Settlement Finality (blog.ethereum.org)
2326.
Varoufakis: IT technologies will overthrow Capitalism (failedevolution.blogspot.com)
2327.
The Bitcoin affair: Craig Wright 'to move' Satoshi coin (bbc.com)
2328.
Microsoft’s PhotoDNA (combatsextrafficking.com)
2329.
Goose Finds Cop and Leads Him to Her Trapped Baby (thedodo.com)
2330.
A list of everything that goes in the head of your document (github.com)
2331.
Silicon Valley's Design Renaissance (1989) (nytimes.com)
2332.
Web Developer Checklist (webdevchecklist.com)
2333.
A work from 1616 called 'the first science fiction novel' (theguardian.com)
2334.
The Boundaries of Westphalia (cato.org)
2335.
Show HN: ScaleFT, Login to Servers Using Google Apps Auth (scaleft.com)
2336.
Linksys Says It Won't Block Third Party Open Source Firmware (dslreports.com)
2337.
How England's First Feline Show Countered Victorian Snobbery About Cats (atlasobscura.com)
2338.
Bits of Me – Confronting your data doppelgänger (schirn.de)
2339.
Can a 700 M.P.H. Train in a Tube Be for Real? (nytimes.com)
2340.
The connected car may be the dumbest idea ever, but it’s not going away (arstechnica.com)