December 2018 Archive
1621.
Our Ownershipless Future (ivaylopavlov.com)
1622.
Fun with Unicode in Swift (tworingsoft.com)
1623.
The inconvenient truth about love and divorce (2016) (ideas.ted.com)
1624.
Senior Google employee says quest to stop leaks is now management's top priority (businessinsider.in)
1625.
Upcoming Changes to PNG Support at Twitter (twittercommunity.com)
1626.
No hospital, just an emergency ‘department’. They’re popping up all over (tampabay.com)
1627.
The Colossal, Monumental Screw Up That Is Marriott Security (danmunro.com)
1628.
O2 outage: 31m mobile customers unable to get online (theguardian.com)
1629.
Banned from a meeting because of GDPR by the Romanian Ministry of Education (twitter.com)
1630.
Donations to arXiv (arxiv.org)
1631.
Show HN: Autodrome – Framework for Development of Self-Driving Cars (github.com)
1632.
Ask HN: Tools of the trade, 2018 edition
1633.
Testing shell commands from Python (blog.esciencecenter.nl)
1634.
The year in post-quantum crypto [video] (media.ccc.de)
1635.
Open source software in quantum computing (journals.plos.org)
1636.
Storing Memories in Your Synapses (brainfacts.org)
1637.
An Open Source Tool for Scaling Multi-Agent Reinforcement Learning (bair.berkeley.edu)
1638.
Solving Clasical AI Planning Problems with Fast Downward and Haskell (ocharles.org.uk)
1639.
Brain, refactored (murrayc.com)
1640.
Why Are We Still So Fat? (nytimes.com)
1641.
WhatsApp has an encrypted child porn problem (techcrunch.com)
1642.
Doomsday Prep for the Super-Rich (2017) (newyorker.com)
1643.
How can dereferencing the first character take longer when the string is longer? (blogs.msdn.microsoft.com)
1644.
Uber Is Headed for a Crash (nymag.com)
1645.
The QNX Neutrino Microkernel (2007) (qnx.com)
1646.
DNS Over TLS: Encrypting DNS End-To-end (code.fb.com)
1647.
Brute-forcing a seemingly simple number puzzle (nurkiewicz.com)
1648.
GE Powered the American Century, Then It Burned Out (wsj.com)
1649.
Portal: Personal Onion Router to Assure Liberty (github.com)
1650.
Quantum theory cannot consistently describe the use of itself (nature.com)