2017 Archive
991.
Big brother is here, and his name is Facebook (thenextweb.com)
992.
LineageOS for microG – Access Google services without closed software (lineage.microg.org)
993.
Text-only NPR (thin.npr.org)
994.
Remove my password from lists so hackers won't be able to hack me (github.com)
995.
Ask HN: What's a side project you built to make money that hasn't?
996.
Fuchsia: a new operating system (lwn.net)
997.
A rising sentiment that IBM’s Watson can’t deliver on its promises (gizmodo.com)
998.
Gitlab 9.0 (about.gitlab.com)
999.
Why Momentum Works (distill.pub)
1000.
Pixar offers free online lessons in storytelling via Khan Academy (techcrunch.com)
1001.
The Founder: A Dystopian Business Simulator (thefounder.biz)
1002.
Uber is valued at $70B, you can get it at $999 (huffingtonpost.com)
1003.
Afraid of Makefiles? Don't be (matthias-endler.de)
1004.
Ask HN: What are best tools for web scraping?
1005.
Facebook’s code quality problem (2015) (darkcoding.net)
1006.
Ikea has bought TaskRabbit (recode.net)
1007.
Two days in an underwater cave running out of oxygen (bbc.com)
1008.
NYPD is canceling its Palantir contract (buzzfeed.com)
1009.
When it comes to internet privacy, be afraid, analyst suggests (news.harvard.edu)
1010.
It's been 191 days since Google Drive worked for me (dynalist.io)
1011.
CloudPets teddy bears leaked and ransomed, exposing kids' voice messages (troyhunt.com)
1012.
Yew: Rust framework for making React-like client web apps (github.com)
1013.
Atmospheric CO2 levels accelerate upwards (nationalobserver.com)
1014.
New Skype Update Is Horrible (answers.microsoft.com)
1015.
Equifax linked customers to my fake phishing version of their site by accident (twitter.com)
1016.
Comcast accused of cutting competitor’s wires to put it out of business (arstechnica.com)
1017.
Apple has acquired Workflow, an automation tool for iPad and iPhone (techcrunch.com)
1018.
“Dig once” bill could bring fiber Internet to much of the US (arstechnica.com)
1019.
Shedding Light on the “Black Box of Inappropriateness” (cherylyeoh.com)
1020.
Almost everything on computers is perceptually slower than it was in 1983 (tttthreads.com)