- Fathom: a framework for understanding web pages ? Mozilla Hacks – the Web developer blog –
- Tube Near You –
- Setup Keras+Theano Backend and GPU on Ubuntu 16.04 –
Author: Chris
Bookmarks for May 5th
- cdgriffith/Box: Python dictionaries with recursive dot notation access –
- Finance is Not the Economy – The Unz Review –
- Show HN: Pocket Stream Archive – A personal Way-Back Machine | Hacker News –
Bookmarks for May 4th through May 5th
These are my links for May 4th through May 5th:
- iPad Apps, iPhone Apps, Deals and Discovery at App Shopper – Popular Recent Changes for iOS/ –
- In-Depth: Your Patek Philippe Caliber 89 Now Needs A Service – A Look At Horology’s Easter Problem –
- I tried Haskell for 5 years | Hacker News –
- Empirical Bayes for multiple sample sizes | Hacker News –
Bookmarks for May 4th
- Considerations on Cost Disease | Hacker News – The question I'd ask in response to this post is "So where did the money actually go?"
I suspect inequality and wealth transfer explains much more of the observed trends than the author acknowledges at the end. In each of the verticals discussed, there have been strong (albeit sometimes less obvious) trends for consolidation among institutions and organizations. This includes companies, government contractors, and even vendors in ecosystems we tend to think of as decentralized like local schools, where significant consolidation might be occurring over time at the level of food suppliers like Aramark, utility companies, or diesel fuel suppliers for school buses.
These organizations' compensation and capital structures, in turn, likely grew increasingly unequal over time. Stockholders, stakeholders like executives, and intermediaries like insurance companies in those organizations likely extracted more and more capital relative to traditional stakeholders like the college students, physicians, and teachers addressed in the post.
Wealth transfer from traditional stakeholders (college students, physicians, teachers) to organizational stakeholders (execs, stockholders, suppliers in consolidating markets) seems like both a cause and a consequence of the 'cost disease' discussed in the post. - wal-e/wal-e: Continuous Archiving for Postgres – WAL-E is a program designed to perform continuous archiving of PostgreSQL WAL files and base backups.
- Against Willpower | Hacker News –
Bookmarks for May 3rd
- How to start a startup without ruining your life – Blog – SuperHi –
- Troubling chemicals found in wide range of fast-food wrappers – The Verge –
- Preventing Alzheimer’s Disease Is Easier Than You Think | Psychology Today –
- Ask HN: Successful one-person online businesses? | Hacker News –
- A practical introduction to functional programming (2013) | Hacker News –
- Listen to DJ Sets, Mixes, Tracks and Sounds | hearthis.at –
- Grim’s Scythe — Hopac: Getting Started with Jobs – Hopac is a unique library that offers lightweight threading along with a host of other valuable concurrency constructs, all of which make it easier to write highly-concurrent software.
- ha4: Concurrent ML and HOPAC –
- Developer experience –
- The lost art of 3D rendering without shaders –
- Lispy sets | Hacker News –
- How Does the SQL Server Query Optimizer Work? | Hacker News –