March 2017 Archive
9781.
HackIllinois – using a car as a N64 controller (avidhacker.com)
9782.
Introducing Gnome 3.24: Portland (help.gnome.org)
9783.
Stack Overflow Developer Survey 2017 Results (stackoverflow.blog)
9784.
Google Spreadsheet that auto-tweets your archives (storybench.org)
9785.
Invented by Google, the New World of Site Reliability Engineering is Emerging (blog.netsil.com)
9786.
US lawmakers question police use of facial recognition tech (cio.com)
9787.
Why SQLite Succeeded as a Database with Richard Hipp (changelog.com)
9788.
Taking Prophet for a Spin (blog.fastforwardlabs.com)
9789.
AWK one-liners (pement.org)
9790.
Somebody is buying thousands of 5-star-reviews for WhatsApp (telegra.ph)
9791.
Tmux and Vim: Copy and Paste on MacOS Sierra (devroom.io)
9792.
Learning to walk again (medium.com)
9793.
The Brief, Confusing History of Foam Packaging (atlasobscura.com)
9794.
From dotCloud to Docker (jpetazzo.github.io)
9795.
Download ActiveGo – ActiveState (activestate.com)
9796.
Chasing the First Arcade Easter Egg (edfries.wordpress.com)
9797.
Crash exploitability analysis on Google Cloud Platform: security in plaintext (cloudplatform.googleblog.com)
9798.
Show HN: An interactive CLI for tsconfig, tslint, eslint, and babel config files (github.com)
9799.
A Scholarly Sting Operation Shines a Light on ‘Predatory’ Journals (nytimes.com)
9800.
Arctic’s Winter Sea Ice Drops to Its Lowest Recorded Level (nytimes.com)
9801.
Platforms vs. Products (blog.keen.io)
9802.
A photo tour of the Apple Japanese Keyboard layout (blog.ashryan.io)
9803.
First Amendment and the Right to Anonymous Speech (eff.org)
9804.
Andrew Ng Is Leaving Baidu in Search of a Big New AI Mission (technologyreview.com)
9805.
Reddit rolls out user profiles amid site makeover (reuters.com)
9806.
ES2015: The Spread Syntax (developer.mozilla.org)
9807.
How to use Upwork to get your MVP built (techstarted.com)
9808.
The Puzzling Performance of the Samsung 960 Pro (percona.com)
9809.
Android O Adaptive Icons (developer.android.com)
9810.
An Android phone makes a better server than you'd think (hackaday.com)