February 2019 Archive
7981.
STAMPing on event-stream (hillelwayne.com)
7982.
Always Being Productive (xn--xp8h.st)
7983.
How Professor Fei-Fei Li Completely Transformed Deep Learning (medium.com)
7984.
The Classic Browser “Designed to Serve YOU Not Corporations” (theclassictools.com)
7985.
Hackers keep trying to get malicious Windows file onto MacOS (arstechnica.com)
7986.
NHTSA's Flawed Autopilot Safety Study Unmasked (thedrive.com)
7987.
Apple Plans News Event for March 25 (buzzfeednews.com)
7988.
Narcos: The real Jorge Salcedo talks about what the show gets right (2017) (ew.com)
7989.
Bezos Selfies Had Been Uploaded on Amazon Prime for Weeks Completely Unnoticed (boredroomnews.com)
7990.
Neural network writes candy heart messages (aiweirdness.com)
7991.
History Suggests Trump’s Approach to Trade Is Wrong (medium.com)
7992.
What El Chapo’s Trial Revealed: The Inner Workings of a $14B Drug Empire (wsj.com)
7993.
Stanford sociologists explore who does, and doesn’t, want a DNA ancestry test (news.stanford.edu)
7994.
The Founder of the Haynes Manual, John Haynes, Has Died (topgear.com)
7995.
Activision Blizzard reports historic earnings amid big layoffs (gamasutra.com)
7996.
New York Needs Amazon (nytimes.com)
7997.
Coq 8.9.0 (github.com)
7998.
India Forces Amazon to Choose: Operate E-Commerce Platform or Sell Goods (nakedcapitalism.com)
7999.
VFEmail says all US-based data is gone (cnet.com)
8000.
Macro security stories distract firms from real problems (medium.com)
8001.
California Governor Proposes Digital Dividend Aimed at Big Tech (bloomberg.com)
8002.
Australian court refuses coal mine permit due to climate change (abc.net.au)
8003.
Privilege Escalation in Ubuntu Linux (dirty_sock Exploit) (initblog.com)
8004.
The two codes your kids need to know (nytimes.com)
8005.
Plasma 5.15.0 released (kde.org)
8006.
How to Build a Working Digital Computer (1968) (archive.org)
8007.
What is the n-body problem? (gereshes.com)
8008.
Amazon's cloud competitors: We won't compete with you (cnbc.com)
8009.
Mechanical Movements (507movements.com)
8010.
620M accounts stolen from 16 hacked websites now for sale on dark web (theregister.co.uk)