July 2019 Archive
1411.
Catlab.jl: Experimental framework for applied category theory (github.com)
1412.
BlueJeans also runs a webserver when installed on macOS (support.bluejeans.com)
1413.
Trump’s Twitter blocks violate First Amendment rights, appeals court affirms (arstechnica.com)
1414.
Global Passport Power Rank 2019 (passportindex.org)
1415.
Ask HN: Why is programming editing text?
1416.
The Clean Farming Revolution (bbc.com)
1417.
MEPs back EU ban on throwaway plastics by 2021 (europarl.europa.eu)
1418.
FUSE performance improvements with eBPF [pdf] (usenix.org)
1419.
Billions of Random Numbers in a Blink of an Eye (dragan.rocks)
1420.
NASA Maps Surface Changes from California Quakes (jpl.nasa.gov)
1421.
The Mathematics of Text Structure (arxiv.org)
1422.
Suffragetto: An early 1900s board game between suffragettes and police (romchip.org)
1423.
Linux System Programming by Robert Love – Reading Notes (xmonkee.com)
1424.
YouTube isn’t for kids, but kids videos are among its most popular (latimes.com)
1425.
Black soldier fly maggots: high in protein with a small carbon footprint (scmp.com)
1426.
Trump signals scrutiny of Google's ties with China after Thiel comments (wsj.com)
1427.
Amazon offers $10 to Prime Day shoppers who hand over their data (reuters.com)
1428.
GraphQL Performance Monitoring Is Hard (medium.com)
1429.
Giving Up TV for a Month Changed My Brain (fastcompany.com)
1430.
Are smartphones the new 'opium of the people'? (bbc.com)
1431.
Polanyi’s Paradox (en.wikipedia.org)
1432.
Amazon Aurora with PostgreSQL Compatibility Supports Serverless (aws.amazon.com)
1433.
We Changed YugaByte DB Licensing to Apache 2.0 (blog.yugabyte.com)
1434.
Frontier: ORNL's 2021 exascale supercomputer will run on AMD CPUs and GPUs (olcf.ornl.gov)
1435.
Spray-on nanofiber 'skin' may revolutionize wound care (fastcompany.com)
1436.
Detecting Photoshopped Faces by Scripting Photoshop (peterwang512.github.io)
1437.
The Stranding of the MV Shokalskiy (idlewords.com)
1438.
Gin, Sex, Malaria, and the Hunt for Academic Prestige (chronicle.com)
1439.
What if you couldn’t program with loops? (mikealche.com)
1440.
The heritability of fertility makes world population stabilization unlikely (sciencedirect.com)