Four short links: 29 December 2017
Signal Processing, Minecraft Economics, OS Design, and Real-time Video Faking
Nat Torkington has been active in web development since the early days of the web. He wrote the bestselling Perl Cookbook, and chaired conferences for O'Reilly Media for a decade. During his time at O'Reilly Media, Nat was an editor and then became a trend-spotter for the O'Reilly Radar group, identifying the topics to build events and books around. He has worked in areas as diverse as networking, publishing, science, edtech, and NLP. He now lives in New Zealand, where he runs Kiwi Foo Camp and helps startups grow.
Signal Processing, Minecraft Economics, OS Design, and Real-time Video Faking
Blockchain, Patent Problems, Great Speech, and Inventor Research
When to Decentralize, Uncanny Valley, Anti-Adblocker AI, and Biosensors
Internet Mea Culpa, Lending for Data, Graphical Projections, and NPS Harmful
Downscaling Attacks, CS50x Online, Input Lag, DIY ICs
Jamming Robot, Online Politeness, AR and Self-Organization, and Open Paperless
Australian Anonymization, Age-Targeted Job Ads, Open Data, and Public Domain
Dynamicland, Censorship Data, Google Maps vs. Apple Maps, and MTurk Wages Suck
Mapping Secrets, Deep Learning Chemistry, Ted Chiang, and Testing Browser Apps
Support Archive.org, Mathematics Magazine, CRISPR Drives, and Science Journal For Kids
Machine Teaching, Accuracy Trumps Bias, Fairness in ML, and Quantum Game
Game Theory, Wet String, NIPS Notes, and Bias Talk
Prototyping, Quantum Algorithms, 6ed Unix Commentary, and Quantum Computing
Learned Indexes, Text Tables, Weaponized Ed Data, and Bad Feedback Loops
Programming Falsehoods, Money Laundering, Vulnerability Markets, and Algorithmic Transparency
Books for Young Engineers, Fake News, Digital Archaeology, and Bret Victor
Measurement, Value, Privacy, and Openness
TouchID for SSH, Pen Testing Checklist, Generativity, and AI Data
Analog Computing, Program Synthesis, Midwestern Investment, and Speed Email
Campaign Cybersecurity, Generated Games, Copyright-Induced Style, and Tech Ethics