| 1. | | One Thing Well – A weblog about simple, useful software (onethingwell.org) |
| 368 points by tete on Sept 21, 2014 | 46 comments |
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| 2. | | OpenGL in 2014 (tomdalling.com) |
| 284 points by ingve on Sept 21, 2014 | 115 comments |
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| 4. | | How to Figure Out Your Competitors’ Revenues in About 70 Seconds (2013) (quora.com) |
| 175 points by pud on Sept 21, 2014 | 50 comments |
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| 5. | | The invasion of corporate news (ft.com) |
| 151 points by lxm on Sept 21, 2014 | 66 comments |
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| 6. | | Personhood: A Game for Two or More Players (meltingasphalt.com) |
| 147 points by benbreen on Sept 21, 2014 | 51 comments |
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| 7. | | The Pirate Bay Runs on 21 “Raid-Proof” Virtual Machines (torrentfreak.com) |
| 139 points by tjaerv on Sept 21, 2014 | 54 comments |
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| 8. | | How many Commodore 64 computers were really sold? (2011) (pagetable.com) |
| 123 points by tosh on Sept 21, 2014 | 58 comments |
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| 9. | | Design for programmers (method.ac) |
| 96 points by adamnemecek on Sept 21, 2014 | 27 comments |
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| 10. | | Fifty years of Moog (arstechnica.com) |
| 85 points by yiransheng on Sept 21, 2014 | 26 comments |
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| 11. | | After Surgery, Surprise $117,000 Medical Bill from Doctor He Didn't Know (nytimes.com) |
| 84 points by jeswin on Sept 21, 2014 | 91 comments |
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| 13. | | Pauseless GC for OpenJDK [video] (youtube.com) |
| 76 points by tosh on Sept 21, 2014 | 16 comments |
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| 14. | | Shell-conduit: Write Shell Scripts in Haskell with Conduit (chrisdone.com) |
| 80 points by dbaupp on Sept 21, 2014 | 34 comments |
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| 15. | | Profiling: Interactive Python profiler (github.com/what-studio) |
| 73 points by shinvee on Sept 21, 2014 | 4 comments |
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| 16. | | Ask HN: How do I set up a HIPAA-compliant server? |
| 68 points by th3o6a1d on Sept 21, 2014 | 52 comments |
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| 17. | | The obesity era: The problem may be bigger than any of us (2013) (aeon.co) |
| 66 points by kevbin on Sept 21, 2014 | 74 comments |
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| 18. | | Uselessd: A Stripped Down Version of Systemd (darknedgy.net) |
| 67 points by ahomescu1 on Sept 21, 2014 | 40 comments |
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| 19. | | TTY: Ruby gem for building command line apps (peter-murach.github.io) |
| 59 points by pmurach on Sept 21, 2014 | 15 comments |
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| 20. | | London’s Tech Boom Is More Than Just Hype, the Hard Numbers Say So (techcrunch.com) |
| 64 points by vvvv on Sept 21, 2014 | 93 comments |
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| 21. | | Ask HN: How was your experience using parse.com? |
| 60 points by justplay on Sept 21, 2014 | 38 comments |
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| 22. | | Why we believe apple (jwz.org) |
| 62 points by msh on Sept 21, 2014 | 11 comments |
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| 23. | | Can a Computer Replace Your Doctor? (nytimes.com) |
| 61 points by mp4box on Sept 21, 2014 | 47 comments |
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| 24. | | How to make a simple television (1928) (retronaut.com) |
| 53 points by arash_milani on Sept 21, 2014 | 3 comments |
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| 26. | | Why I Am Not a Member of the American Psychological Association (chalquist.com) |
| 56 points by pmoriarty on Sept 21, 2014 | 42 comments |
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| 27. | | Eliminating GIL in Ruby Through Hardware Transactional Memory (2013) (ibm.com) |
| 51 points by Nowaker on Sept 21, 2014 | 14 comments |
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| 28. | | Why old versions of 286 Xenix did not run on 386s (os2museum.com) |
| 47 points by yuhong on Sept 21, 2014 | 13 comments |
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| 29. | | Homoiconic Faq (c2.com) |
| 49 points by networked on Sept 21, 2014 | 31 comments |
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| 30. | | “Not with a bang but a whimper” (mpettis.com) |
| 43 points by mooreds on Sept 21, 2014 | 6 comments |
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| More |
My girlfriend had three strokes, in succession, two years ago (when she was 22). The night before these strokes occurred, she had a transient ischemic attack (TIA). She began speaking gibberish to her friends. She texted me later that night explaining what happened. Her friends had laughed about it because they thought she was just acting like a goofball. I had no idea these were signs of a TIA, but I told her that if it happened again she needed to go to the doctor immediately.
The next day, the right side of her body went numb. This time, she was around people who noticed something was wrong, and she was immediately rushed to the emergency room. By the next day, I had flown a thousand miles (from the location of my new job) to be with her. She couldn't remember many words. She couldn't read a clock. She did not know the answer to 3 + 0.
It turned out that, similar to the author of this article, clots had traveled through the hole in her heart and up to her brain. Luckily, she recovered fully and was back to her old self within about a month. She had surgery to fix the PFO a couple months later. The neurologist told her that nine times out of ten, the clot travels a different path, and the victim is left dead or braindead. I am so lucky. Writing about this has me in big tears.
I am going to stop writing and go hug her now.