November 2017 Archive
10801.
Edge Computing – A Beginner’s Guide (hackernoon.com)
10802.
This is a computer on your brain (2006) (wired.com)
10803.
Computer Science Papers in Web of Science: A Bibliometric Analysis [pdf] (kiv.zcu.cz)
10804.
How Facebook's oracular algorithm determines the fates of startups (nytimes.com)
10805.
Przybylski’s Star II: Abundance Anomalies (sites.psu.edu)
10806.
FreeCodeCamp Python: All you need to know about tree data structures (medium.freecodecamp.org)
10807.
The fourth generation of OLAP based database technology (medium.com)
10808.
95 Theses about Technology (95theses.co.uk)
10809.
Teaching “Madame Bovary” (newyorker.com)
10810.
I’m a Therapist, and Sometimes I Get Deeply Lonely – Here’s How I Deal (huffingtonpost.com)
10811.
Vim and Python: a Match Made in Heaven (fullstackpython.com)
10812.
How I Deal with Differences in Opinion (medium.com)
10813.
ARHero – News about AR/VR, tutorials, projects (spectrum.chat)
10814.
How to brew better coffee at home (washingtonpost.com)
10815.
Vim and Python: Making yourself at home (justin.abrah.ms)
10816.
Slouching Toward War with North Korea (mobile.nytimes.com)
10817.
Gun Violence Archive (gunviolencearchive.org)
10818.
The Last of the Old-School Tech Reviewers (wired.com)
10819.
Hackers “Wizards of the Electronic Age” 1985 (youtube.com)
10820.
How Google Is Fuelling the Sexualisation of Women in Sport (noobnorm.com)
10821.
In Java 3 = 12 (virtualspecies.com)
10822.
Example of universal routing+rendering with haskell-servant and GHCJS/Miso (github.com)
10823.
Promise vs. Observable (stackoverflow.com)
10824.
Rep. Rob Bishop Getting Close to Invalidating Endangered Species Act (washingtonpost.com)
10825.
Why Personal Tech Is Depressing (wsj.com)
10826.
What Will Bitcoin Look Like in Twenty Years? (hackernoon.com)
10827.
Meet the Doomsday Prepper donating all of his food to Puerto Rico (nj.com)
10828.
Brutalism and Antidesign (nngroup.com)
10829.
Microservices, Blockchain, biology and evolution (byrslf.co)
10830.
The Family That Built an Empire of Pain (newyorker.com)