February 2019 Archive
4411.
You Have Around 20 Minutes to Contain a Russian Apt Attack (zdnet.com)
4412.
How Remote Work Helps Companies Scale (bureauwork.com)
4413.
Emacs Cider 0.21 (github.com)
4414.
Twitter’s PWA Does Not Indicate That More Menu Options Are Available (webplatform.news)
4415.
Infoporn: 100 Years of SCI-FI, Explored (wired.com)
4416.
William James and the Spiritualist’s Phone (laphamsquarterly.org)
4417.
Splunk Pulls Out of Russia with Mysterious Statement (zdnet.com)
4418.
CrateDB, Machine Learning, and Hydroelectric Power: Part One (crate.io)
4419.
Don’t Pick a Career, Create One (medium.com)
4420.
Tesla General Counsel Quits After 2 Months in Latest Upheaval (nytimes.com)
4421.
Web Payments API Overview (developers.google.com)
4422.
Teen Builds Working Nuclear Fusion Reactor in Memphis Home (foxnews.com)
4423.
What Is the Best Time to Post to Hacker News? (medium.com)
4424.
Bad Statistics Are Costing British Taxpayers $1.3B a Year (bloomberg.com)
4425.
Feds Share Watchlist with 1,400 Private Groups (apnews.com)
4426.
Practice Your Go WebAssembly with a Game (medium.com)
4427.
Waymo Car Responds to Human Direction at Broken Traffic Light (youtube.com)
4428.
Use Swagger to Generate API Interface (github.com)
4429.
Open History – Publicly Sharing My Browsing History (ferrucc.io)
4430.
Ukrainian Software Development Industry: Year in Review, Prospects for 2019 (n-ix.com)
4431.
Waymo Obeys a Cop at Broken Traffic Signal (forbes.com)
4432.
The Alexa-Friendly World of Wikidata (wired.com)
4433.
Travis CI, GmbH Might Be Imploding After Being Acquired? (twitter.com)
4434.
The First Private Mission to the Moon May Launch Thursday Night (arstechnica.com)
4435.
Spark Ada for the Misra C Developer (learn.adacore.com)
4436.
Climate Change Enters Its Blood-Sucking Phase (theatlantic.com)
4437.
Generating Synthetic Data for Image Segmentation with Unity and PyTorch/fastai (blog.stratospark.com)
4438.
Hot Tech Markets, 2019 [slides] (slideshare.net)
4439.
WTF Is a Knowledge Graph? (hackernoon.com)
4440.
Hate Crime Hoaxes Are More Common Than You Think (quillette.com)