October 2016 Archive
1621.
Sun, surf and low rents: why Lisbon could be the next tech capital (theguardian.com)
1622.
Why Friday's Massive DDoS Attack Should Be Terrifying (truevault.com)
1623.
Murderous Games: Gladiatorial Contests in Ancient Rome (historytoday.com)
1624.
Practical and ethical implications of memory enhancement (arxiv.org)
1625.
Show HN: Vector Video (theblackbox.ca)
1626.
Edge web platform status (developer.microsoft.com)
1627.
Linux Only BIOS Update (support.lenovo.com)
1628.
Unikernels: Rise of the Library Hypervisor (slideshare.net)
1629.
In the UK, running a blog over HTTPS is “terrorism”, says Scotland Yard (privateinternetaccess.com)
1630.
WikiLeaks says Assange's Internet link was severed by 'state party' (foxnews.com)
1631.
Exploiting Linux kernel heap off-by-one (cyseclabs.com)
1632.
Lego-Like Wall Produces Acoustic Holograms (sciencebulletin.org)
1633.
Quantum-Chemical Insights from Deep Tensor Neural Networks (arxiv.org)
1634.
Improving the Responsiveness of the Document Detector (blogs.dropbox.com)
1635.
Why you should never use Upwork, ever (shadandjulia.com)
1636.
The Lightest Metal Ever (2015) [video] (boeing.com)
1637.
Platform as a Service team takes even-handed approach to meetings (gds.blog.gov.uk)
1638.
Saying farewell to Pixate (blog.pixate.com)
1639.
Elm 1+2: can't download X (twitter.com)
1640.
How Twitter deploys its widgets JavaScript (blog.twitter.com)
1641.
The Wonderful World of Keyboards (blog.atom.io)
1642.
Zuckerberg in Lagos Land (backchannel.com)
1643.
General Elections 2016 in Iceland (icelandmonitor.mbl.is)
1644.
Subzero 12-hour Nonfreezing Cryopreservation of Porcine Heart (2015) (mobile.journals.lww.com)
1645.
AtomBombing: A Code Injection That Bypasses Current Security Solutions (blog.ensilo.com)
1646.
Hive's Design Principles (blog.hive.com)
1647.
Things Found Inside Cheap Chinese Products (chaostrophic.com)
1648.
Russians seek answers to central Moscow GPS anomaly (yahoo.com)
1649.
Cayenne – Drag-and-drop IoT project builder (cayenne-mydevices.com)
1650.
Some experiments with hacking the Elektronika MK-61 (alfredklomp.com)