August 2017 Archive
481.
Note to Google Employees from CEO Sundar Pichai (blog.google)
482.
Government Report Finds Drastic Impact of Climate Change on U.S (mobile.nytimes.com)
483.
North Korea Missile Appears to Have Flown Over Japan, Abe Says (bloomberg.com)
484.
Candy Japan total sales cross $1M (candyjapan.com)
485.
X: The First Fully Modular Software Disaster (art.net)
486.
MongoDB has filed confidentially for IPO (techcrunch.com)
487.
Browser Extensions Standard (browserext.github.io)
488.
Memories of Kurt Gödel (rudyrucker.com)
489.
Japan’s ’golden coder’ making games apps aged 82 [video] (bbc.com)
490.
Google Issuing Refunds to Advertisers Over Fake Traffic, Plans New Safeguard (wsj.com)
491.
A straight talk about btrfs (suse.com)
492.
Serverless: A lesson learned the hard way (sourcebox.be)
493.
New and improved bike routing, with low stress options (mapzen.com)
494.
Disney’s Choice (stratechery.com)
495.
How to Make Python Run as Fast as Julia (2015) (ibm.com)
496.
No One Fails Anymore – Everybody ‘Pivots’ (mobile.nytimes.com)
497.
Confession of a so-called AI expert (huyenchip.com)
498.
Second body cam video of Baltimore cops manufacturing evidence discovered (arstechnica.com)
499.
The U.S. is risking an academic brain drain (axios.com)
500.
Some insurers insist that patients forgo generics and buy brand-name drugs (nytimes.com)
501.
Ask HN: How much do developers earn in Europe? (docs.google.com)
502.
269 people join class-action lawsuit against Google claiming age discrimination (bizjournals.com)
503.
The Google Memo: Four Scientists Respond (quillette.com)
504.
HelenOS: portable microkernel-based multiserver operating system (helenos.org)
505.
Songbird: Spatial Audio Encoding on the Web (google.github.io)
506.
On managing outrage in Silicon Valley (techcrunch.com)
507.
Our Broken Economy, in One Simple Chart (nytimes.com)
508.
Scientists Edit a Dangerous Mutation in Human Embryos (nytimes.com)
509.
WebAssembly: A New Hope (pspdfkit.com)
510.
Despite privacy outrage, AccuWeather still shares location data with ad firms (zdnet.com)