2019/11/30 #
Today’s links:
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Curl - 25000 commitsdaniel.haxx.se #
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Mashed potato cybertruckwww.theverge.com #
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For the Sake of Your Event Listeners, Use Web Workersmacarthur.me #
2019/11/29 #
Today’s links:
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Two-Factor Authentication with Node.jsdavidwalsh.name #
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Why doesn't git diff work between two dates? Use rev-list to get commits for the the full date rangestackoverflow.com #
2019/11/28 #
Today’s links:
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Twitter pauses plan to delete inactive accountswww.axios.com #
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Bill Gates-backed Heliogen targets 1,500°C solar thermal - Seems like this has the potential to be interesting technology but I would have thought that the applications they mention such as making steel would require very large solar arrays and I wonder how the variance in the suns output would affect productionwww.theengineer.co.uk #
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A short but sweet description of the SVG viewBox elementwattenberger.com #
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Introducing Bootstrap Iconsblog.getbootstrap.com #
2019/11/27 #
Today’s links:
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Why Amazon won’t dominate in groceries - I think this is an important area to watch because the upgrading of the food supply chain to a highly technological infrastructure will have a big impact on all of us, I’d like to see some data about how the different approaches affect society at large, inequality, happiness, health, integration, diversity, education, mobility, what happens to these aspects as we roll out all this tech? Would be a great topic for some citizen journalism imhoventurebeat.com #
2019/11/26 #
Today’s links:
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Elon Musk promises Cybertruck vs. Ford F-150 rematch after controversy - The thing that struck me from seeing the vehicle side in the video on this post, is that you really could use the cybertruck as a skateboard/snowboard/rollerblade/bmx rampwww.theverge.com #
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Web development on Chrome OSwww.youtube.com #
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Paywalls and the greater digital divide - Knight poll asks 'Who should pay for news?'www.zdnet.com #
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Firefox-maker Mozilla details internet security and privacy projectswww.zdnet.com #
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Virgin Galactic’s real goal may be point-to-point travel around Eartharstechnica.com #
2019/11/25 #
Today’s links:
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Europe Soup Map - 277 European Soups - A lot of soups and your probably going to want some soup after spending a few minutes on this websitewww.tasteatlas.com #
2019/11/24 #
Today’s links:
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CNAME Cloaking, the dangerous disguise of third-party trackersmedium.com #
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Diagram.codes - Diagram generation tool - This looks pretty cool, it's probably the easiest way I've seen to create a sequence diagram, lots of other diagram types toowww.diagram.codes #
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There are a lot of people worried about the sale of the .org domain to a private equity firm, the .org domain is traditionally used by non-government organisationssavedotorg.org #
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Elon Musk announces there have been 146,000 reservations so far for Cybertruck since the launch announcement, also it's bulletproofwww.slashgear.com #
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Cybertruck steel ball launch event window smashjalopnik.com #
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John Gruber Cybertruckdaringfireball.net #
2019/11/23 #
Today’s links:
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There might be Alien insects on Mars, photos from robot rover revealwww.theregister.co.uk #
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Why the Tesla Cybertruck Looks So Weirdwww.wired.com #
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Single div CSS Tesla Cybertruckcodepen.io #
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Announcing core Node.js support for ECMAScript modules - I'm not sure whether to get interesting in this or start moving to higher ground, could be interesting but also feels like there is the potential for things to get messymedium.com #
2019/11/22 #
Today’s links:
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Design APIs - The Evolution of Design Systems - There are quite a lot of moments of surprising clarity in this article, but I found it's confusing matters too, also designer power grab, much?matthewstrom.com #
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Build your own React - This looks interesting, something to read later if I get immersed in any react projectspomb.us #
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FAB - Frontend Application Bundles - Docker containerization type paradigm for front end web applications, oh boy, just say HTML/CSS/Javascriptfab.dev #
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Farewell to snowboard pioneer Jake Burton Carpentercoolhunting.com #
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Meet the Cybertruck, Tesla's Ford-Fighting Pickup - I don't know much about electric cars, but I want to see these driving aroundwww.wired.com #
2019/11/21 #
Today’s links:
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Google updates their policy on political ads in response to the general concern about online platforms being used to mislead electionswww.blog.google #
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Facebook is making Visual Studio Code it's default development environment - Also interesting in this article is that internally Facebook uses Mercurial rather than gitdevelopers.facebook.com #
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The Firefox UI is now built with Web Components - Seems like this is a pretty big achievementbriangrinstead.com #
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Losing the News - The Decimation of Local News and the Search for Solutionspen.org #
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How the Great Pyramid at Giza Looked in 2560 BCEkottke.org #
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A massive scandal - how Assange, his doctors, lawyers and visitors were all spied on for the U.S.www.repubblica.it #
2019/11/20 #
Today’s links:
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Your Daily Podcasts Playlist Makes Finding Your Next Favorite Show Easier Than Evernewsroom.spotify.com #
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Thousands flock to Wikipedia founder's 'Facebook rival'www.bbc.com #
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The 40% keyboardtbf-rnd.life #
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Astronomers Detect Water Vapor Around Jupiter's Moon Europawww.wired.com #
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Some interesting news from JQuery - They have migrated the code base from AMD to ES modulesgithub.com #
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Local-first software - you own your data, in spite of the cloud - I've read about this concept before, and I'm really interested in it, I was looking at the Native File System API a few days ago, only the user has to add access to the file system each time at tab opens which makes it impractical to use with local copies of the datablog.acolyer.org #
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Native File System APIwicg.github.io #
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Elon Musk’s Starlink Satellites Are Already Causing a Headache for Astronomersgizmodo.com #
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Linux's commands and tricks I'm using in my daily job as a developer - The most useful one here is probably the ssh tunnel to a database command, but I use quite a lot of these too, for instance watch is really usefuldev.to #
2019/11/19 #
Today’s links:
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The Language Agnostic, All-Purpose, Incredible, Makefile - I've been wanting to learn how to use make and makefiles for a while now, this article looks like it covers a lot of the main topics, and there are some examples of how it can be useful in working with ruby/npm hopefully I'll get some time in the future to re-read this in more detailblog.mindlessness.life #
2019/11/18 #
Today’s links:
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The Danger of “Simplicity”asthasr.github.io #
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How Boomboxes Got So Badass - A bit of 80s nostalgiawww.collectorsweekly.com #
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DNS-over-HTTPS causes more problems than it solveswww.zdnet.com #
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The messy legal scrap to bring celebrities back from the dead - The idea that someone who is not you can own your identity is weirdwww.wired.co.uk #
2019/11/17 #
Today’s links:
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NYT Magazine piece the portends that the internet of eutopia is now dead and it's been taken over by the internet of scum - Worth the read just to see what the current MSM brush strokes are paintingwww.nytimes.com #
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I've been seeing a lot of mentions about the Brave browser recently which has reached v1.0 - This article summarises it's features which are very much about privacy but also there is some sort of blockchain based ads system - It's built by Brendan Eich creator of the Javascript programming language and co-founder of the Mozilla projectwww.wired.co.uk #
2019/11/16 #
Today’s links:
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Twitter releases the first iteration of it's political ads banwww.vox.com #
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Supreme Court to consider Oracle's copyright clash with Googlewww.zdnet.com #
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Wikipedia co-founder Jimmy Wales launches Twitter and Facebook rivalwww.ft.com #
2019/11/15 #
Today’s links:
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Apple News+ has struggled to add subscribers since first week of launch in March - On launch they added 200 000 subscribers but that figure hasn't increased significantly, and is small in comparison to Apple Music which has 60 million subscriberswww.cnbc.com #
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Instagram Announces Global Expansion of Hidden Like Counts Testwww.socialmediatoday.com #
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Latest release of node process manager pm2 4.2.0 now available, some interesting features like highlighting specified string in logs output, sysmonit and sysinfos commands among othersgithub.com #
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NodeBB - Forum software powered by Node.js and built on either a Redis or MongoDB databasegithub.com #
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Handling Errors in Express - Some useful tips here, quite focussed on async/await but also general stuff about creating errors in expresszellwk.com #
2019/11/14 #
Today’s links:
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How to implement a simple queue using mongodbblog.serverdensity.com #
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mongodb-queue - Message queues which uses MongoDBgithub.com #
2019/11/13 #
Today’s links:
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What Half of iPhone Users Don’t Know About Their Privacyfoundation.mozilla.org #
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DNA Could Be One of a Million Possible Genetic Moleculesgizmodo.com #
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Japan's Asteroid Probe Is Finally Returning to Earth With Its Precious Cargogizmodo.com #
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Intel, Mozilla, Red Hat, and Fastly partner to make WebAssembly a cross-platform runtimewww.zdnet.com #
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Average price brands pay per Instagram influencer sponsorship - $1,643www.businessinsider.com #
2019/11/12 #
Today’s links:
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GitHub: Over 80% of repository contributions come from outside the U.S.venturebeat.com #
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Google Chrome is experimenting with labelling websites according to how fast they load using colored progress bars, badges and loading messagesblog.chromium.org #
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SpaceX adds five dozen more Starlink satellites to burgeoning constellationarstechnica.com #
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Founder's Guide to Building a Developer Tools Businessmanifold.co #
2019/11/11 #
Today’s links:
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Bats-core - Bash Automated Testing System (2018)github.com #
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bpkg is a bash package manager - like npm but for bash, I didn’t even know there was such a thing as a ‘bash package’www.bpkg.sh #
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A New Open Source Library & Pattern for Sharing Bash - Lots of bash related things in my feeds todaywww.conjur.org #
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The new dot com bubble is here - it’s called online advertising - This article was interesting but I found it was too long and didn’t make it to the endthecorrespondent.com #
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What Newspapers Can Teach Us About Web Designwww.smashingmagazine.com #
2019/11/10 #
Today’s links:
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mongodb-cron - This package offers a simple API for scheduling tasks and running recurring jobs on MongoDB collectionsgithub.com #
2019/11/09 #
Today’s links:
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Instagram Will Test Hiding 'Likes' in the US Starting Next Weekwww.wired.com #
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Twitter in India - Why was rival Mastodon trending?www.bbc.com #
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Apple Is Trying to Kill Web Technologyonezero.medium.com #
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The WSJ has this article that visually describes how Google's add business works, reminds me of those scenes from The Big Short that describe the subprime mortgage crisis, really hope we don't all end up as AAA garbage Jenga brickswww.wsj.com #
2019/11/08 #
Today’s links:
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A ton of people received text messages overnight that were originally sent on Valentine’s Daywww.theverge.com #
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OpenAI has published the text-generating AI it said was too dangerous to share - Might explain the high percentage weird names people have in news storieswww.theverge.com #
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Rightwing columnist smacks journalist Glenn Greenwald on Brazil radio showwww.theguardian.com #
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YouTube’s homepage has had a redesign - Looked the same to me at first, but the before and after gif in this article shows the difference, also new "Add to Queue" featurewww.socialmediatoday.com #
2019/11/07 #
Today’s links:
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Ex-Twitter employees accused of spying for Saudi Arabiawww.bbc.com #
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This AP article on the Saudi/Twitter story is a bit odd, they interview a person called Adam Google, considering Google the company was incorporated in 1998, it's pretty strange to have someone with the surname of Google - They also use quotes from "a critic" with no nameapnews.com #
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Twitter is rolling out Topics, a way to follow subjects automatically in the timeline - Sort of an interesting feature, but too many algorithms imo, personally I like the simplicity of the hashtagwww.theverge.com #
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What Is a Shell? - I liked this relatively short article because it goes one level deeper than other similar articles, mentioning the execve system call that the shell calls, and I think in the context of describing what the shell does this adds a lot of interesting context and detailyunchi.dev #
2019/11/06 #
Today’s links:
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There are calls to ban microtargeting in political adswww.nbcnews.com #
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Henry Kissinger Warns That AI Will Fundamentally Alter Human Consciousnessgizmodo.com #
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Smart TV companies are making the BBC pay for prominencewww.wired.co.uk #
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ngrok - Public URLs for a variety of use cases such as developing webhooks integrations, sending previews to clients, testing chatbots, demoing from your local machine, ssh access to your rasberry pingrok.com #
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How to generate a test version of the Stripe webhook header string - This wasn't mentioned in the API docs so linking to it here as it is quite usefulgithub.com #
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Expose local servers to the internet - Pretty useful web tool for developing webhooksserveo.net #
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localtunnel exposes your localhost to the world for easy testing and sharing - similar functionality to the previous linkwww.npmjs.com #
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Highlights from Git 2.24 - I’m always surprised by how many features are added in git releases, in this one macros for enabling groups of settings, new history rewriting tools and a lot moregithub.blog #
2019/11/05 #
Today’s links:
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Introducing Our New Company Brand - Facebook introduces new branding to make it clear which apps are part of the Facebook suite (Facebook app, Messenger, Instagram, WhatsApp, Oculus, Workplace, Portal and Calibra), the branding will use different coloring depending on contextnewsroom.fb.com #
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Introducing the new Microsoft Edge and Bing - Release date for he new chromium based Edge browser is set for Januaryblogs.windows.com #
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I had't heard of the Collections feature in Microsoft Edge, looks to be useful, makes sense to be able to easily export data into their other cloud web toolswinaero.com #
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Microsoft Japan tested a four-day work week- Productivity jumped by 40%www.theguardian.com #
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GDPR is missing the point, says Edward Snowden - "The problem isn't data protection, the problem is data collection" - "It's not data that's being exploited, it's people that are being exploited"www.zdnet.com #
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GitHub Sponsors is now out of beta in 30 countriesgithub.blog #
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The Future of DEV - I find that I am linking to quite a lot of articles from dev.to recently, they write good articles about dev so it's interesting to read about their future plansdev.to #
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Using MongoDB as a realtime database with change streamshackernoon.com #
2019/11/04 #
Today’s links:
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LocalStack - A fully functional local AWS cloud stackgithub.com #
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8Chan Is Back and Calling Itself 8kun Nowgizmodo.com #
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Microsoft's New Edge Browser Logo - My first thought was “Blue Firefox”gizmodo.com #
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The Internet Archive Is Making Wikipedia More Reliable - They are adding links to digital copies of books that are used in Wikipedia citationswww.wired.com #
2019/11/03 #
Today’s links:
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Comets from other star systems might be very common, apparently there might be around 12 of them passing through our solar system at any one timescience.sciencemag.org #
2019/11/02 #
Today’s links:
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BBC error reveals names of 120 women who sought equal paywww.theguardian.com #
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Life expectancy for American men drops for a third yearwww.cbsnews.com #
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Show HN - Simple command line note taking toolnews.ycombinator.com #
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Modern JavaScript features you may have missedwww.breck-mckye.com #
2019/11/01 #
Today’s links:
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Facebook’s political ad ban created a disaster in Washington state - "People just find workarounds" - I guess if only companies selling products are allowed to buy adverts then the politicians will just court random companies that will stick political ads in their product ads, it could be a whole new era of media politicswww.theverge.com #
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htop explained - Explanation of everything you can see in htop/top on Linuxpeteris.rocks #
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Hands-on guide - developing and deploying Node.js apps in Kubernetes - This guide is well put together, very readable, appears to have just the right details, but as I read it the same feeling that always occurs when I read a Docker/Kubernetes tutorial occurs, at some point you start wondering how far down the rabbit hole you are, each step makes sense and I can see how it would be super useful but also so many layers of complexity have been added, it's like they've added an entire OS inside the OS that you are already running, sure it looks slick when it's working, but what happens when something stops working and you are deep in the woods - Anyway I like that Kubernetes is open source, but I worry about everything being reliant on Docker, what happens if they start having issues?learnk8s.io #
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Tech workers get extra geeky and ghoulish as Halloween takes over Seattle-area officeswww.geekwire.com #
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The next quantum computing buzz phrase / slogan - “The Quantum Advantage”towardsdatascience.com #
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European Gaia-X Cloud Project Draws Backlash From U.S. Tech Giantswww.wsj.com #