January 2017 Archive
9271.
Aid in reverse: how poor countries develop rich countries (theguardian.com)
9272.
Common JavaScript functions with Lodash (netlify.com)
9273.
Ask HN: Node OS for mobile – how near or far is the possibility?
9274.
How an Allegedly Fake Video Killed a Much-Hyped Drone Startup (forbes.com)
9275.
Workouts with fewer reps could yield better results (sciencebulletin.org)
9276.
Did President Obama Pad the K-12 Computer Science for All Bill by $3.6B? (slashdot.org)
9277.
The Water in Your Glass Might Be Older Than the Sun (nytimes.com)
9278.
Log-so-handy; a convenient log for git (github.com)
9279.
The Case Against Hamilton (reason.com)
9280.
Biases in Google's Staged Rollouts and Significance Testing (medium.com)
9281.
Well that wasn't very nice (mfile.io)
9282.
The World Needs Unified Messaging (hackernoon.com)
9283.
Solar Irradiance Measurements (johncarlosbaez.wordpress.com)
9284.
AsciiDoc to HTML/PDF to GitHub with Travis CI and Asciidoctor Docker Containers (mgreau.com)
9285.
Bufferbloat in layman's terms, or why your internet connection sucks (cdn.ampproject.org)
9286.
Deep Q Network Plays Atari Space Invaders (youtube.com)
9287.
A wimpy La Niña is on the way toward La Nada status (blogs.discovermagazine.com)
9288.
Moon Express Raises $20M, Moon Trip Fully Funded (techcrunch.com)
9289.
Show HN: Multi-Language Thesaurus Query/Replacement Plugin for Vim (github.com)
9290.
Math Made Me a Packers Fan, and It’s Going Great (fivethirtyeight.com)
9291.
Pinterest’s Ben Silbermann Looks Ahead (wsj.com)
9292.
Show HN: Write personal(or public) journals for free (goodnightjournal.com)
9293.
SREcon16 – The Realities of the Job of Delivering Reliability (youtube.com)
9294.
Live OpenAI DeepDrive in GTA V (twitch.tv)
9295.
Matterwiki – A simple and beautiful wiki for teams (matterwiki.com)
9296.
4 pieces of evidence showing FBI Director James Comey cost Clinton the election (vox.com)
9297.
Awesome Games Done Quick 2017 (twitch.tv)
9298.
Front-End Job Interview Questions (github.com)
9299.
Free Software (fsf.org)
9300.
Why your games are made by childless, 31 year old white men (2014) (web.archive.org)