2017 Archive
3361.
The future of iOS is 64-bit only: Apple to stop support of 32-bit apps (macworld.com)
3362.
Nvidia GeForce GTX 1080 Ti (anandtech.com)
3363.
Bitcoin hits 3-year peak, nears record high on U.S. ETF approval (reuters.com)
3364.
US Announces Withdrawal from TPP (asia.nikkei.com)
3365.
The tech sec­tor might be evil (tbray.org)
3366.
The MongoDB hack and the importance of secure defaults (snyk.io)
3367.
Ending the cult of the CEO (managementtoday.co.uk)
3368.
C++ 17 is Done (herbsutter.com)
3369.
Coroutines are now in Clang trunk, libc++ (twitter.com)
3370.
Eta – A powerful language for building scalable systems on the JVM (eta-lang.org)
3371.
MIT Media Lab Disobedience Award (media.mit.edu)
3372.
Beer giant ABI bought many craft brews and is now buying beer rating websites (foodandpower.net)
3373.
Ubuntu Unity is dead: Desktop will switch back to GNOME next year (arstechnica.com)
3374.
Google’s Environmental Report (environment.google)
3375.
Announcing the Windows Bounty Program (blogs.technet.microsoft.com)
3376.
Cloud Hosting Showdown: DO vs. Linode vs. Vultr vs. OVH vs. Scaleway (webstack.de)
3377.
Fresh IDE (fresh.flatassembler.net)
3378.
Things to know before using AWS’s Elasticsearch Service (read.acloud.guru)
3379.
Rustgo: Calling Rust from Go with near-zero overhead (blog.filippo.io)
3380.
34th Chaos Communication Congress Live Streams (streaming.media.ccc.de)
3381.
Street View of 80s NYC (80s.nyc)
3382.
A Zero-Math Introduction to Markov Chain Monte Carlo Methods (medium.com)
3383.
Visualizing Concurrency in Go (2016) (divan.github.io)
3384.
How to Build Your Own Blockchain Part 3 – Writing Nodes That Mine and Talk (bigishdata.com)
3385.
The Sims Game Design Documents (1997) (donhopkins.com)
3386.
A Beginner's Guide to the Mathematics of Neural Networks (1998) (citeseerx.ist.psu.edu)
3387.
U.R. Rao has died (nytimes.com)
3388.
Oracle refuses to accept pro-Google “fair use” verdict in API battle (arstechnica.com)
3389.
To Protect Voting, Use Open-Source Software (nytimes.com)
3390.
Essential Products – Andy Rubin’s new hardware company (essential.com)