February 2018 Archive
1291.
A taste of CoreData – A graph framework (yageek.github.io)
1292.
Double Pendulum Visualization (jnafzig.github.io)
1293.
NeuroSAT: Learning a SAT Solver from Single-Bit Supervision (arxiv.org)
1294.
Show HN: Tiiiny growth ideas for SaaS (tiiiny.com)
1295.
The Untold Story of the Pentagon Papers Co-Conspirators (newyorker.com)
1296.
What Amazon Does to Poor Cities (theatlantic.com)
1297.
Self-Censorship in Public Discourse: A Theory of 'Political Correctness' (1994) [pdf] (brown.edu)
1298.
Homoiconicity isn’t the point (2012) (calculist.org)
1299.
Using a laser to wirelessly charge a smartphone safely across a room (phys.org)
1300.
Show HN: RoastMe.io – A neural network that has learned to insult (roastme.io)
1301.
Altered Carbon – All the DNA of great science-fiction with some missing links (criticalhit.net)
1302.
Monero Gold integer undeflow scam (66shitcoins.com)
1303.
Show HN: Deploy a Go Lambda to Ping a Site in 20 Seconds (github.com)
1304.
DLVM: A modern compiler framework for neural network DSLs (dlvm.org)
1305.
How Cloud Storage uses Spanner for consistent bucket listing (cloudplatform.googleblog.com)
1306.
A forgotten theory of dreams that inspired Vladimir Nabokov (newrepublic.com)
1307.
Rollup now has code-splitting and we need your help (medium.com)
1308.
Monadic I/O and Unix shell programming (2001) (okmij.org)
1309.
Machine learning benchmark: GPU providers (rare-technologies.com)
1310.
Cryptography: Or the History, Principles, and Practice of Cipher-Writing (1898) (publicdomainreview.org)
1311.
Qt or HTML5? A Million Dollar Question (embedded-computing.com)
1312.
Los Angeles’ homelessness crisis (latimes.com)
1313.
What is an MVP for a B2B startup? (evrim.io)
1314.
Were There Really Arrow Storms? (strangehistory.net)
1315.
Show HN: git self-blame – Blame yourself for others' mistakes (github.com)
1316.
Mercedes-Benz Confirms It Will Skip Detroit Auto Show in 2019 (bloomberg.com)
1317.
A man who became immune to snake venom (theguardian.com)
1318.
Rare photographs that changed lives (bbc.co.uk)
1319.
The crisis of American forensics (thenation.com)
1320.
With ePrivacy looming, German publishers scramble to get users logged in (digiday.com)