2016 Archive
4201.
Standard deviation is ready for retirement: Nassim Taleb (2014) (edge.org)
4202.
Swift 2.2 Released (swift.org)
4203.
Experiments with disabling the ME on Sandybridge x230 (coreboot.org)
4204.
U.S. judge throws out cell phone 'stingray' evidence (mobile.reuters.com)
4205.
Ask HN: How do you handle DDoS attacks?
4206.
Hacked Together 118 GB Floppy Disk (popularmechanics.com)
4207.
Tokamak: A Rust IDE for Atom (vertexclique.github.io)
4208.
Humble Book Bundle: The Joy of Coding (humblebundle.com)
4209.
KiCad: A commitment to freedom (giving.web.cern.ch)
4210.
Don't Start Big, Start a Little Snowball (blog.nugget.one)
4211.
Scala 2.12.0 is now available (scala-lang.org)
4212.
Avalonia – A multi-platform .NET UI framework (github.com)
4213.
Biggest patent troll of 2014 gives up, drops appeal (arstechnica.com)
4214.
Learn Node.js: A free interactive course for Node beginners (hyperdev.com)
4215.
Whatup (nasa.gov)
4216.
Introducing a new, advanced Visual C++ code optimizer (blogs.msdn.microsoft.com)
4217.
King Tut's dagger blade made from meteorite, study confirms (cbc.ca)
4218.
Call for support for Lisp in WebAssembly development (article.gmane.org)
4219.
Itsy Bitsy Data Structures – Simplified examples of many common data structures (github.com)
4220.
Building native macOS applications with Rust (blog.bugsnag.com)
4221.
The Basics of Web Application Security (martinfowler.com)
4222.
Easy Scalable Text Rendering on the GPU (medium.com)
4223.
PR 101 for engineers (medium.com)
4224.
Magic Mushroom Drug Lifts Depression in Human Trial (scientificamerican.com)
4225.
My Interviews with Amazon (thesocietea.org)
4226.
Twitter: It is too late for it to become the giant people expected (economist.com)
4227.
SpaceX Falcon rocket explodes on landing after delivering satellite to space (bbc.com)
4228.
Grateful Dead Fan Timothy Tyler Has Been Granted Clemency (liveforlivemusic.com)
4229.
FBI operated 23 Tor-hidden child porn sites, deployed malware from them (arstechnica.com)
4230.
Judge sends two to prison for 7 years for H-1B fraud (computerworld.com)