May 2017 Archive
2701.
History of UtiLisp Hacking (1990) [pdf] (softwarepreservation.org)
2702.
Elon Musk: The future we're building – and boring (TED2017) (m.youtube.com)
2703.
Clockmaker John Harrison vindicated 250 years after ‘absurd’ claims (theguardian.com)
2704.
FCC Votes 2-1 to kill Net Neurtrality this morning (consumerist.com)
2705.
Reddit admins caught editing DNC whistleblower Seth Rich's Reddit comments (reddit.com)
2706.
OpenShift.io Red Hat announces free cloud-native dev environment (techcrunch.com)
2707.
How the U.S. New Economy Business Model has devalued science and engineering PhDs (ineteconomics.org)
2708.
Keybase – Crypto for Everyone on the App Store (itunes.apple.com)
2709.
Urbit – So What Are You Building? (youtube.com)
2710.
Google Cloud TPUs (blog.google)
2711.
Show HN: Ledger – Know whose turn it is to pay (useledger.com)
2712.
First results from search for a dark light (symmetrymagazine.org)
2713.
QArt Codes (2012) (research.swtch.com)
2714.
Show HN: Freactal: Dead-simple, composable state management for React (github.com)
2715.
Top 35 bad programming habits (techbeacon.com)
2716.
John Oliver Against Net Neutrality (gofccyourself.com)
2717.
David Lynch on the return of Twin Peaks and why he will never make another film (smh.com.au)
2718.
Tactile Maps of Greenland (2010) (arctickingdom.com)
2719.
Fluent Design System (fluent.microsoft.com)
2720.
Sam Altman for governor? (recode.net)
2721.
Why the Left Refuses to Talk About Venezuela (mises.org)
2722.
Google’s AlphaGo Defeats Chinese Go Master in Win for A.I (nytimes.com)
2723.
The brain starts to eat itself after chronic sleep deprivation (newscientist.com)
2724.
Show HN: SaaS Vulnerability Scanner for Small Businesses (scannersec.com)
2725.
It's time for the US to use the metric system (vox.com)
2726.
Ask HN: What will coding be like in 25 years?
2727.
Europe isn’t the new Silicon Valley. It’s better (thenextweb.com)
2728.
Tesla semi truck announced (zdnet.com)
2729.
Is Free Market Good for Public?
2730.
Sexism, racism and bullying are driving people out of tech, study finds (theguardian.com)