Gooooooood morning, Herd!!! Hey, this is not a test, this is a tech roundup. Time to rock it from the Delta to the DMZ.
AI, bots and robots
- Deep learning applications in drug discovery and protein structure analysis
- A captcha so fiendish only a robot could solve it
- An AI Whose Performance Increases If They Let It Sleep and Dream
- Can a robot pick a strawberry better, faster, and cheaper than a human?
- Underactuated Robotics
- Deep learning may need a new programming language
- Algorithms for Reinforcement Learning
- Machine Learning Data Set Preparation
- Machine Learning Data Set Preparation
- Neuroscientists Say They’ve Found an Entirely New Form of Neural Communication
- Sphero RVR – The Go Anywhere, Do Anything Programmable Robot
- Robots Track Moving Objects with Unprecedented Precision
- Growing a Compiler: Getting to Machine Learning from a General Purpose Compiler
- Reflections on Learning Rust by Building Punchtop
- Simple Webapp to Play with Open AI Transformer (Smaller Version)
- QuillBot: Free Paraphrasing Tool
- PlotNeuralNet: Latex Code for Drawing Neural Networks
- Crazy Circuits: An Open Source Electronics Learning System
- Deep Learning on the GPU in Clojure from Scratch: Sharing Memory
- Structuring Legal Documents with Deep Learning
- Don’t Let Robots Pull the Trigger
Blockchain and decentralization
- First impressions of Filecoin
- Decentralized Clearing Network: A Protocol for Hybrid Decentralized Exchanges
- Samsung Galaxy S10 Features Cryptocurrency Storage
Woman computer scientist of the week
Margaret Belle (Oakley) Dayhoff was an American physical chemist and a pioneer in the field of bioinformatics. Dayhoff was a professor at Georgetown University Medical Center and a noted research biochemist at the National Biomedical Research Foundation (NBRF) where she pioneered the application of mathematics and computational methods to the field of biochemistry. She dedicated her career to applying the evolving computational technologies to support advances in biology and medicine, most notably the creation of protein and nucleic acid databases and tools to interrogate the databases. She originated one of the first substitution matrices, point accepted mutations (PAM). The one-letter code used for amino acids was developed by her, reflecting an attempt to reduce the size of the data files used to describe amino acid sequences in an era of punch-card computing.
Cloud and architecture
- AWS Nitro System
- Comparing the Network Performance of AWS, Azure and GCP
- Announcing Cloudflare Workers.dev
- Build and Deploy Serverless React Apps with Next.js 8 and Zeit Now
- Nginx Is Giving Away a Free O’Reilly Book on Cloud Native Devops with Kubernetes
Development and languages
- Men fighting Florida’s Python epidemic
- Losing Your Privacy in the Digital Age: Share Your Stories
- Western Digital’s RISC-V “SweRV” Core Design Released for Free
- Builder vs. Programmer Perspective
- The Rise of the Tech-Savvy Parent
- Awesome Python
- Warning: debian stable kernel upgrade breaks most ARM SBC
- Facebook Has Behaved Like ‘Digital Gangsters,’ U.K. Parliament Report Says
- Building a Kotlin Native App on iOS/Android
- XFiles – FOSS File Manager and Archiver with Root Support for Android
- A Curated List of Falsehoods Programmers Believe In
- Forecasting in Python with Prophet
- Programming Books You Wish You Read Earlier
- Gitlab 11.8 Released
- Why Language-Oriented Programming? Why Racket?
- Facebook Planned to Spy on Android Phone Users, Internal Emails Reveal
Quote of the week
A fool with a tool is a more dangerous fool.
— u.
Enterprises
- Spoofing Google Search Results
- Google .dev domain early access
- Google backtracks on Chrome modifications that would have crippled ad blockers
- Google.com Ranks Slow Using New Google PSI Speed Rank
- Amazon will pay $0 in taxes on $11,200M in profit for 2018
- Amazon will pay $0 in taxes on $11B in profit for 2018
- Bill de Blasio: The Path Amazon Rejected
- Amazon pays no 2018 federal income tax, report says
- How Badly Is Google Books Search Broken, and Why?
- Intellectual Control
- Vulnerability in Tesla Website Used to Find Details of 8500 Cars in US Inventory
- Google Teases a Big Gaming Announcement for March 19th
- Google says Nest’s built-in mic not listed in specs was not meant to be secret
- Microsoft Is Abandoning SHA-1 Hashes for Updates–But Why?
- Why Do Zebras Have Stripes? To Shoo Away Flies
- It Looks Like Ibera Is Gutting Travis CI Just a Few Weeks After Acquiring It
- Intelligent Tracking Prevention 2.1
- National Geospatial Intelligence Agency Open Source Software
- Nvidia GeForce GTX 1660 Ti 6GB Review
- Amazon Is the Invisible Backbone Behind ICE’s Immigration Crackdown
- Bill Maher Tells Amazon’s Jeff Bezos to “Take One for the Team”
Other news
- Nuclear Waste Dumpsters in Massachusettes Are Costing Taxpayers a Fortune
- Mother Learns the Identity of Child’s Grandmother. Sperm Bank Threatens to Sue
- Payless is closing all its 2,100 US stores
- Intel Starts Publishing Open-Source Linux Driver Code for Discrete GPUs
- What I learnt on a men-only retreat…
- Etsy sellers say their bank accounts were emptied in major billing snafu
- EU cross-border payments outside Eurozone: MEPs scrap excessive fees
- Password Managers: Under the Hood of Secrets Management
- Linux Kernel Through 4.20.10 Found Vulnerable to Arbitrary Code Execution
- CVE-2019-8912: Use After Free Vuln in All Linux Kernels Up to 4.20.10
- Python Scripting – Beginner to Advanced
- Norway Makes First Payment to Indonesia for Reducing Carbon Emissions
- STMicro STM32MP1 Cortex A7/M4 MPU Supports Linux and Android
- Cambridge University Launches Archive of Aerial Photos Going Back to 1945
- A Heavily-Commented Linux Kernel Source Code
- What Happens at a Firearms Training for Teachers
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