Four short links: 29 November 2016
Data in Type, China Adopts Black Mirror, Thinking Technology, and Wireless Mice
Data in Type, China Adopts Black Mirror, Thinking Technology, and Wireless Mice
Skill Levels, Auto-Provisioning from GitHub, Laptops are Niche, and Vehicular Firehose
Malware Phylogenetics, Bipartite News, Human-Like AI, and Structuring Work
Smart Reply, Serverless, Identifying Criminals, and Programmer Ethics
Facebook Censorship, Regulating Security, A/B Testing, and Spying Headphones
Connections App, Voice UIs, Pentagon's Dystopia, and Robot Armies
Master Strategy, Writing a MMORPG, Human-Level AI, and Network of Sorrows
Bare Metal, Serverless, Deep Learning, and Junkbot Winners
The O’Reilly Bots Podcast: An optimistic look at the future of bots.
Hacking Locked Machines, Rules Engine, Trello Tips, and Autonomous Driving Soon
Watch highlights covering software architecture, microservices, distributed systems, and more. From the O'Reilly Software Architecture Conference in San Francisco 2016.
Martin Thompson explores the architectures that emerge from applying design patterns required for high performance, resilience, security, usability, and other quality-of-services measures.
Rachel Laycock and Cassandra Shum take opposing sides in the microservices debate.
Kelsey Hightower offers a quick overview of Kubernetes—the community, the project, and the technology for managing containerized workloads.
The problem of fake news and bad sites trying to game the system is an industry-wide problem — companies should share data and best practices in the effort to combat it.
Deeper neural nets often yield harder optimization problems.
CRISPR in Humans, VR Sadness, Reasoning, and Robot Dancing
Mike Roberts introduces the concepts behind serverless architectures, explains how serverless breaks from the past, and provides reasons why it's worthy of some of the hype it’s currently receiving.