September 2019 Archive
10201.
Tic Tac Toe – Creating Unbeatable AI (towardsdatascience.com)
10202.
Show HN: Obscura – Create proxy emails in one click (obscura.one)
10203.
An Ode to Privacy Normalcy (themargins.substack.com)
10204.
Brainfuck with Salesforce and Lightning (medium.com)
10205.
Panera is losing nearly 100% of its workers every year (cnbc.com)
10206.
Car Talk's Long Goodbye (jalopnik.com)
10207.
Show HN: A solution against zero day security vulnerabilities
10208.
NIH launches novel nationwide search for neuroprotective stroke therapies (nih.gov)
10209.
eBay for Jobs (thejobauction.com)
10210.
Novel advice for incoming STEM freshmen (spectator.us)
10211.
A Proof Without Words about Cubes and Squares (1977) (fermatslibrary.com)
10212.
Ask HN: Business Meetings over Lunch
10213.
Vegan and vegetarian diets 'link to higher stroke risk' (bbc.co.uk)
10214.
JiFi: Jira Client with UI Menus (github.com)
10215.
Navy Contractors Feud over Who Pays for Fixes to Troubled $13B Warship (bloomberg.com)
10216.
Show HN: A simple assistant for software tool management
10217.
Industrial Society and Its Future (1995) [pdf] (editions-hache.com)
10218.
Ask HN: API Method Naming Clarity
10219.
Coding Challenge Best Practice Checklist - techcnial recruitment test design (candidatecode.com)
10220.
V6 Peering and US Issues: 2019 National Internet Segments Reliability Report (habr.com)
10221.
Ask HN: How to build web apps that deploy user environments?
10222.
Do Your Managers Want Agility? (avivbenyosef.com)
10223.
Porting a 75,000 line native iOS app to Flutter (medium.com)
10224.
Ask HN: How does HN detect visited URLs?
10225.
The Product-Minded Software Engineer (blog.pragmaticengineer.com)
10226.
Hong Kongers avoid China's internet censorship with peer-to-peer mesh network (legalinsurrection.com)
10227.
USB4 Branding Is Reportedly Downright Bad (extremetech.com)
10228.
Looking for Lurkers: A New Way to Do SETI (centauri-dreams.org)
10229.
Nintendo launches a $30 SNES-style wireless controller for the Switch (thenextweb.com)
10230.
Nokia flip phones are back (theverge.com)