March 2020 Archive
2221.
Are you a 'cultural fit' for your job? Machines can now tell (bbc.com)
2222.
WHO warns United States could become coronavirus epicenter (reuters.com)
2223.
How are you managing stress?
2224.
Public Health Responses to COVID-19 Outbreaks on Cruise Ships (cdc.gov)
2225.
Tell HN: Your old Yahoo Mail emails are probably gone
2226.
Bill Gates: If I were president, this is what I would do to fight coronavirus (cnbc.com)
2227.
Testing Dolt using BATS (Bash Automated Testing System) (dolthub.com)
2228.
Ask HN: Is Sourcehut a good GitHub/Gitlab alternative?
2229.
How Working-Class Life Is Killing Americans, in Charts (nytimes.com)
2230.
Magic Mailboxes (techreflect.net)
2231.
Pornhub's Premium Content Is Free All Month to Italians Stuck in Lockdown (gizmodo.co.uk)
2232.
OK, Airlines, here are your bailout terms (businessinsider.com)
2233.
A human monoclonal antibody blocking SARS-CoV-2 infection (biorxiv.org)
2234.
Show HN: Guten Haiku – mine haiku from text with 80s CLI (github.com)
2235.
TSMC Announces 2x Reticle CoWoS for Next-Gen 5nm HPC Applications (fuse.wikichip.org)
2236.
Amazon Employee in Seattle Tests Positive for Coronavirus (geekwire.com)
2237.
Canadian scientists make Covid-19 research breakthrough, isolating virus (ctvnews.ca)
2238.
Design Principles (principles.adactio.com)
2239.
Port of Los Angeles sees coronavirus impact sharply reducing imports (wsj.com)
2240.
Simplifying "Intriguing properties of neural networks" (iq.opengenus.org)
2241.
Has the Covid-19 response gone too far? (cbc.ca)
2242.
Herd Immunity (en.wikipedia.org)
2243.
Questioning the Clampdown (wsj.com)
2244.
OneWeb successfully launches 34 more satellites into orbit (oneweb.world)
2245.
Show HN: iOS Login Page (github.com)
2246.
OneWeb to Consider Bankruptcy as Cash Dwindles (bloomberg.com)
2247.
Ask HN: Is there anywhere as intellectually curious as kuro5hin used to be?
2248.
Open Source Hardware: The Rise of RISC-V (thenewstack.io)
2249.
Covid-19 screening tool seeking community contributions
2250.
Copper destroys viruses and bacteria; why isn't it everywhere? (vice.com)