April 2019 Archive
1591.
Handshake: A Peculiar Chat Experiment (nomasters.io)
1592.
Multi-Level Intermediate Representation Compiler Infrastructure (github.com)
1593.
Activation Atlases (openai.com)
1594.
Show HN: Hyper Editor – A back end independent visual composer for web (github.com)
1595.
Deep Learning in Clojure from Scratch to GPU: Initializing Weights (dragan.rocks)
1596.
Model 3 Lease Available (tesla.com)
1597.
Blocking high-risk non-secure downloads (lists.w3.org)
1598.
You probably don't need that hip web framework (char.gd)
1599.
Ask HN: What are the best open-access journals for non-academics to submit to?
1600.
Tanks Are Mighty Fine Things (1946) (imperialclub.com)
1601.
J2cl: Transpile Java to JavaScript for Closure Compiler (github.com)
1602.
DNSSEC Outage on www.cloudflare.com – 2019-03-21 (ianix.com)
1603.
Lyft threatens lawsuit against Morgan Stanley, accusing support of short selling (cnbc.com)
1604.
Haversine Formula (en.wikipedia.org)
1605.
Private Space Launch Firms in China Race to Orbit (spectrum.ieee.org)
1606.
World Population Cartogram (2018) (ourworldindata.org)
1607.
Building a Cathedral (theprepared.org)
1608.
An Introduction to René Girard (danco.substack.com)
1609.
Password checkup: from 0 to 650k users in 20 days (elie.net)
1610.
Roshi: A large-scale CRDT set implementation for timestamped events (github.com)
1611.
Mastering Motion: The Journey to Emulate MotionPlus (dolphin-emu.org)
1612.
The Ghosts of Windows 3.1 (tedium.co)
1613.
Can your employer fire you after you quit? (lifehacker.com)
1614.
Boeing’s Homicides Will Give Way to Safety Reforms if Flyers Organize (nader.org)
1615.
Lyft’s IPO Was a Success, Just Not for Investors Who Bought on Friday (nytimes.com)
1616.
New paper quantifies how quickly Southern planters recovered from the civil war (economist.com)
1617.
Starkey and the Future of Hearing Aids (bloomberg.com)
1618.
Electronic music reduces host attack and mating success in dengue mosquitoes (ncbi.nlm.nih.gov)
1619.
Gutenberg’s moving type propelled Europe towards the scientific revolution (blogs.lse.ac.uk)
1620.
Disembodied pig brains revived: Your questions answered (nature.com)