October 2016 Archive
1051.
1052.
Why public libraries need to support open source
(opensource.com)
1053.
A sense of scale: the best microscopy of 2016
(arstechnica.com)
1054.
Cooperative Domain Name System
(cs.cornell.edu)
1055.
The American chess champion challenging Iran’s hijab fetish
(washingtonpost.com)
1056.
Magic Leap goes to Finland in pursuit of VR and AR talent
(techcrunch.com)
1057.
Intel, TSMC and other chipmakers weigh extreme ultraviolet lithography
(spectrum.ieee.org)
1058.
Ignite UI is now open source
(infragistics.com)
1059.
Hourly Billing is Nuts
(blog.arkency.com)
1060.
Nftables – A new packet classification framework
(developers.redhat.com)
1061.
Electrons in Graphene Behave Like Light, Only Better
(engineering.columbia.edu)
1062.
AT&T for Profit Spying
(thedailybeast.com)
1063.
Barcelona Supercomputing Center
(atlasobscura.com)
1064.
1065.
1066.
1067.
The WhatsApp suicide
(bbc.com)
1068.
Thanks for the memory: How cheap RAM changes computing
(arstechnica.co.uk)
1069.
There is a blind spot in AI research
(nature.com)
1070.
Now Open – AWS US East (Ohio) Region
(aws.amazon.com)
1071.
Really Bad Chess makes chess fun even if you’re really bad
(theverge.com)
1072.
Hello, Yarn
(blog.npmjs.org)
1073.
Search Risk – How Google Almost Killed ProtonMail
(protonmail.com)
1074.
Hacker News Dataset Update October 2016
(aaron-hoffman.blogspot.com)
1075.
Linux Kernel Use-After-Free Remote Code Execution Vulnerability
(securityfocus.com)
1076.
1077.
Something Deeply Wrong with Chemistry (2010)
(chemistry-blog.com)
1078.
Of course smart homes are targets for hackers
(mjg59.dreamwidth.org)
1079.
South Korea military cyber command was hacked
(english.yonhapnews.co.kr)
1080.
Show HN: A database of everything (over 55M keys)
(outpan.com)