Four short links: 1 November 2016
Automatic Security Updates, Client Feedback, PWA Performance, and Beating Burnout
Automatic Security Updates, Client Feedback, PWA Performance, and Beating Burnout
Is it possible for an AI to create revolutionary art?
Faking Neural Nets, Watson Fintech, Changing Behaviors, and Time-Series Features
Engineering Management, Object Spreadsheets, Microservices Hindsight, and Slack Shaping
Overcoming the dearth of labeled data, deployment issues, and regulation fears to increase the use of AI in health care.
The O’Reilly Bots Podcast: Bots are the new web.
Device Time, Ingenious Hardware, Parsing JSON, and Tech Awesome
Five questions for Björn Rabenstein: Insights on Kubernetes, Prometheus, and more.
Watch highlights covering software architecture, microservices, distributed systems, and more. From the O'Reilly Software Architecture Conference in London 2016.
Computer Security MOOC, Human-Data Interaction, Baidu's Open Source, and Termination of Transfer
EdTech Dictionary, Choose Simple, Dictator's Handbook, and Medical Bioinspiration
Soviet Internet, Deep Learning Papers, Chinese Black Mirror, and Coding Conventions
Kevlin Henney explains how uncertainty, lack of knowledge, and options can be used to drive a system’s architecture and its development schedule.
Patrick Kua explores why and how software architects should care about high-performance teams.
Rob Harrop looks at how we can use the concepts of CSP, Actors, and Reactive as powerful tools for reasoning about our systems.
Democratic Exfiltration, Pornish Tasties, Private Deep Learning, and Security Economics
Mark Richards discusses the factors that have enabled the evolution of software architecture over the past three decades and explores what the future of software architecture might look like.
Taking opposing sides, Rachel Laycock and Cassie Shum debate the merits of microservices.