July 2019 Archive
3601.
Reminder That Google Has Always Been Evil (gizmodo.com)
3602.
Simple Habits to Improve Your Critical Thinking (hbr.org)
3603.
Google Continues Investments in Military and Police AI Technology (theintercept.com)
3604.
The Risk of Conflict Rises as the World Heats Up. Vouche for me please. (scientificamerican.com)
3605.
From Mask to Palette (2008) (gurneyjourney.blogspot.com)
3606.
Musical Chemistry (nautil.us)
3607.
‘Dilbert’ Creator Scott Adams Tries to Sell Interviews with Shooting Survivors (thedailybeast.com)
3608.
‘Moscow Mitch’ Tag Enrages McConnell and Squeezes GOP on Election Security (kontackt.ml)
3609.
Why I'm saying no to a smear test (independent.co.uk)
3610.
Ask HN: What’s Your Net Worth?
3611.
Ask HN: Would you respond to requests like “I have an app idea”
3612.
Is Start Up School Down?
3613.
Object-Oriented Programming – The Trillion Dollar Disaster ️ (medium.com)
3614.
The Rise of the Chinese-American Right (nationalreview.com)
3615.
4M IP addresses (44.192.0.0/10) bought by Amazon (ampr.org)
3616.
How the U.S. Could Lose a War with China (theatlantic.com)
3617.
House passes $15 minimum wage bill (cnn.com)
3618.
Ask HN: How long will HN be relevant?
3619.
Show HN: What an API is for non technical people (isaacs-journal.herokuapp.com)
3620.
I was lured into Monsanto’s GMO crusade. Here’s what I learned (undark.org)
3621.
Ukrainian special forces capture commander of Malaysia Airlines flight shootdown (washingtonexaminer.com)
3622.
Trump asks for tanks, helicopters at military parade for July 4th (beta.washingtonpost.com)
3623.
Ask HN: Cloudflare Down?
3624.
The maker of AdBlock Plus is also an ally of online advertising (cnet.com)
3625.
Functional Programming? Don’t Even Bother, It’s a Silly Toy (medium.com)
3626.
Singapore needs sand, but its neighbors refuse to sell (qz.com)
3627.
Ask HN: Gaining a deep understanding of operating systems
3628.
Reinventing the Wheel to Power Electic Vehicle Future (jpost.com)
3629.
Cargo Shipper Maersk Vows to Ship with Zero Carbon Emissions by 2050 (npr.org)
3630.
Why Did Music Visualizers Disappear? (digg.com)