October 2017 Archive
1891.
Chelyabinsk-40 – Russia's other nuclear disaster (thescreamonline.com)
1892.
ES7 brings two new features (medium.freecodecamp.org)
1893.
Returning to analog and putting digital in its place (rtalbert.org)
1894.
How Twitter pushed RT to spend big on 2016 US election (rt.com)
1895.
Irradiated Dimes (2010) (orau.org)
1896.
Texas Official After Harvey: The ‘Red Cross Was Not There’ (propublica.org)
1897.
WeWork employees caught spying on competition (nypost.com)
1898.
Show HN: A simple SMTP proxy that bridges legacy software to modern SMTP servers (github.com)
1899.
US to leave UNESCO (foreignpolicy.com)
1900.
GAO: Climate change already costing US billions in losses (apnews.com)
1901.
Responsibility and the Encryption Debate: A Response to DAG Rosenstein (justsecurity.org)
1902.
AWS does not protect you from devops (smashcompany.com)
1903.
How Bill Gates and Warren Buffett met (cnbc.com)
1904.
New Optimizations Improve Deep Learning Frameworks for CPUs (nextplatform.com)
1905.
Securing Customer Data with KMS and Envelope Encryption in Node.js (blog.koan.co)
1906.
OpenBSD 6.2 Released (undeadly.org)
1907.
Introducing AKS (managed Kubernetes) on Azure (azure.microsoft.com)
1908.
Inside Racket Seminar 7: Alexis King on Hackett (github.com)
1909.
Containerum – Managed Docker Hosting (containerum.com)
1910.
Ask HN: Which laptop for development?
1911.
Apple Limits Lengthy iPhone X Testing for Most Reviewers (wsj.com)
1912.
Ask HN: Why doesn't Microsoft build its own Android “fork”?
1913.
America’s love affair with uniformed men is problematic (economist.com)
1914.
Nigeria has become the seventh country to adopt what3words for mail deliveries (what3words.com)
1915.
How not to talk about an AI-powered future (ines.io)
1916.
Why does American medicine still run on fax machines? (vox.com)
1917.
What are some innovative encryption methods?
1918.
Show HN: Octotrack – automatic dependency and security manager for Ruby apps (octotrack.com)
1919.
Swipe Left: Privacy Practices of Online Dating Apps (royapakzad.co)
1920.
High School Club Builds Self-Driving Vehicle (theinstitute.ieee.org)