November 2017 Archive
1711.
Thunderstorms Observed Triggering Nuclear Reactions in the Sky (sciencealert.com)
1712.
Chopin’s Heart Offers Clues to His Death (nytimes.com)
1713.
DeePhi Deep Neural Network Development Kit (deephi.com)
1714.
Bob Lutz: Kiss the good times goodbye: The auto industry's change curve (autonews.com)
1715.
DNAinfo and Gothamist Are Shutting Down (nytimes.com)
1716.
Why Object-Oriented Languages Need Tail Calls (2011) (eighty-twenty.org)
1717.
Show HN: Dark Mode List – A List of Apps That Support Dark Mode (darkmodelist.com)
1718.
Can Nashville Pull Off a $5.2B Transit Makeover? (citylab.com)
1719.
The Twitter Rules (support.twitter.com)
1720.
Ask HN: What is the funniest bug you encountered?
1721.
Beijing vies for greater control of foreign universities in China (ft.com)
1722.
Pai: Twitter Is Bigger Threat to Open Net Than ISPs (broadcastingcable.com)
1723.
Mercedes-Benz conducting the biggest test using drones to ship everyday items (bloomberg.com)
1724.
Reddit is reportedly considering an IPO (businessinsider.com)
1725.
H1-B Administrators Are Challenging an Unusually Large Number of Applications (rss.slashdot.org)
1726.
Show HN: Dramatiq – An alternative to Celery (dramatiq.io)
1727.
50 SWAT officers bombard, destroy bystander’s house with bombs (reason.com)
1728.
Show HN: Fx - Poor man's serverless framework (github.com)
1729.
Rossini’s sins (newcriterion.com)
1730.
Multidimensional Dataflow in Lucid (billwadge.wordpress.com)
1731.
Source: Tesla Responsible for Model 3 “Production Hell” (dailykanban.com)
1732.
W.E.B. Du Bois on the beauty of sorrow songs (1903) (laphamsquarterly.org)
1733.
Security things in Linux v4.14 (outflux.net)
1734.
Reddit is ready for advertisers, but are advertisers ready for Reddit? (martechtoday.com)
1735.
10 years of love for Emacs undone by a week of VSCode (swizec.com)
1736.
Banks Enforcing Lower Security for Profit (aaronm.net)
1737.
To Fight Revenge Porn, Facebook Is Asking to See Your Nudes (motherboard.vice.com)
1738.
Reach Out and Touch Faith (laphamsquarterly.org)
1739.
The Sideways Elevator of the Future Is Here, and It's Wild (wired.com)
1740.
Under the Darkest Sky (roadsandkingdoms.com)