August 2018 Archive
2311.
Ask HN: Where's the downvote button?
2312.
Erdogan to Boycott iPhones as Turkey’s Feud with U.S. Escalates (bloomberg.com)
2313.
For some, experiencing trauma may act as a form of cognitive training (digest.bps.org.uk)
2314.
Show HN: Comp.fyi – Open compensation data by company and level (levels.fyi)
2315.
Trapped in 99M-Year-Old Amber, a Beetle with Pilfered Pollen (nytimes.com)
2316.
Sprints, marathons and root canals (gojko.net)
2317.
Checking Code Style with Neural Networks (2017) (blog.prismatik.com.au)
2318.
Bessel Beam (en.wikipedia.org)
2319.
A Universal Scripting Framework (1996) [ps] (ccs.neu.edu)
2320.
Random Paths via Chiseling (boristhebrave.com)
2321.
The Intermediate Class (newyorker.com)
2322.
How Insulin Helped Create Ant Societies (quantamagazine.org)
2323.
Show HN: Simple way to obtain pseudorandomness from CPU context switch in Go (github.com)
2324.
Show HN: Efficient data loading using zeta distributions (github.com)
2325.
Qualcomm Now Sampling Next-Gen 7nm Snapdragon SoC For 2019 Android Smartphones (hothardware.com)
2326.
Dancing Pigs or Externalities? Measuring Rationality of Security Decisions [pdf] (arxiv.org)
2327.
Sex, religion and a towering treatise on anatomy (nature.com)
2328.
Using deep learning to answer questions about photos (blog.floydhub.com)
2329.
How to write a good coding article (zellwk.com)
2330.
Doing Windows, Part 9: Windows Comes Home (filfre.net)
2331.
Can zoos be redesigned for a more ethical generation? (independent.co.uk)
2332.
Poll: How do you pronounce “tuple”?
2333.
The Age of Cretinism (openthemagazine.com)
2334.
Ask HN: What types of knowledge are worth knowing?
2335.
Make Your Daughter Practice Math. She’ll Thank You Later (nytimes.com)
2336.
Ask HN: Choosing open source project licenses when not legally-minded?
2337.
Spaghetti injunction: Pastafarianism is not a religion, Dutch court rules (theguardian.com)
2338.
Google, Apple and others no longer require employees to have a college degree (cnbc.com)
2339.
Scaring Animals Can Help Save Them (scientificamerican.com)
2340.
New study finds it’s harder to turn off a robot when it’s begging for its life (theverge.com)