| 1. | | GitHub forking has one big flaw (zbowling.github.com) |
| 207 points by bpierre on Nov 26, 2011 | 47 comments |
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| 2. | | How to be interesting (2006) (russelldavies.typepad.com) |
| 173 points by gscott on Nov 26, 2011 | 33 comments |
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| 3. | | Peter Norvig on dance photography (norvig.com) |
| 151 points by gbog on Nov 26, 2011 | 29 comments |
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| 4. | | Want jobs? Encourage immigration (cnn.com) |
| 144 points by sathishmanohar on Nov 26, 2011 | 111 comments |
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| 5. | | Quotes from 1995 Steve Jobs Interview (lukew.com) |
| 129 points by tilt on Nov 26, 2011 | 38 comments |
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| 6. | | Open Sourced Google Wave demo site. Run from a single server (waveinabox.net) |
| 127 points by progga on Nov 26, 2011 | 36 comments |
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| 8. | | A Reading List for JVM-based Developers (prehensiletail.com) |
| 108 points by mofeeta on Nov 26, 2011 | 14 comments |
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| 9. | | Water-pump failure in Illinois wasn’t cyberattack after all (washingtonpost.com) |
| 106 points by lsr7 on Nov 26, 2011 | 20 comments |
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| 10. | | NodeJS is now the most popular repository on Github (github.com/popular) |
| 98 points by _mnjb on Nov 26, 2011 | 36 comments |
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| 11. | | One of the richest cities in China with a regime that borders on anarchism (reason.com) |
| 94 points by dmix on Nov 26, 2011 | 49 comments |
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| 12. | | The euro zone: Is this really the end? (economist.com) |
| 81 points by mixmax on Nov 26, 2011 | 103 comments |
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| 13. | | Indie Game Music Bundle (Pay what you want) (indiemusicbundle.com) |
| 79 points by statenjason on Nov 26, 2011 | 48 comments |
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| 14. | | Healthcare (avc.com) |
| 78 points by llambda on Nov 26, 2011 | 40 comments |
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| 15. | | Truth goggles sniff out suspicious sentences in news (niemanlab.org) |
| 78 points by mjbellantoni on Nov 26, 2011 | 48 comments |
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| 16. | | Android File System Hierarchy (anantshri.info) |
| 73 points by anantshri on Nov 26, 2011 | 22 comments |
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| 17. | | Machine Learning using Quantum Algorithms (googleresearch.blogspot.com) |
| 72 points by vikram360 on Nov 26, 2011 | 23 comments |
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| 18. | | Linux Mint 12 “Lisa” released (linuxmint.com) |
| 71 points by dzejkej on Nov 26, 2011 | 64 comments |
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| 19. | | Ubuntu’s move to Unity is the best thing that ever happened to Linux (kumailht.com) |
| 70 points by kht786 on Nov 26, 2011 | 110 comments |
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| 20. | | 60% of .edu websites are hacked by turkish "hackers" |
| 70 points by zeynalov on Nov 26, 2011 | 35 comments |
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| 21. | | The original Javascript impl was written in Lisp (mxr.mozilla.org) |
| 62 points by DiabloD3 on Nov 26, 2011 | 29 comments |
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| 22. | | "Curiosity" - Launch 7.30AM EST (Live) (nasa.gov) |
| 62 points by dananjaya86 on Nov 26, 2011 | 22 comments |
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| 23. | | 1,000 workers at Apple’s keyboard suppler in Shenzhen walk out in protest (cultofmac.com) |
| 61 points by DiabloD3 on Nov 26, 2011 | 19 comments |
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| 24. | | Building an Application upon Riak - Part 1 (productionscale.com) |
| 57 points by timf on Nov 26, 2011 | 14 comments |
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| 25. | | Children of the Revolution (wsj.com) |
| 57 points by bootload on Nov 26, 2011 | 13 comments |
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| 26. | | You Can't Hack Photography (andrewvc.com) |
| 57 points by andrewvc on Nov 26, 2011 | 75 comments |
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| 27. | | The Euro falling into a recession? (economist.com) |
| 56 points by aespinoza on Nov 26, 2011 | 118 comments |
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| 28. | | Next Stop Mars: Huge NASA Rover Launches Toward Red Planet (space.com) |
| 50 points by llambda on Nov 26, 2011 | 12 comments |
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| 29. | | When Big Companies Are a Good Idea (yosefk.com) |
| 49 points by kmavm on Nov 26, 2011 | 15 comments |
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| 30. | | The GNU extension language (wingolog.org) |
| 48 points by fogus on Nov 26, 2011 | 33 comments |
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In particular, it is funny how programmers, who make their living by controlling complicated systems, jump to the conclusion that every complicated system is trivially subject to human control. I had a professor once put it this way: disease is just that -- a dis-ease.
The first thing you have to understand is that no organism lives in a biological vacuum. Every organisms interacts with other organisms. When first two organisms meet, the interaction is usually rather messy. One or the other or both die in great numbers. Gradually, they make adjustments and the deaths decrease. One becomes a disease or parasite of the other. Eventually, the two organisms will reach a détente and begin living as symbionts. Given enough time, the distinction between the two may even vanish (see: endosymbiont hypothesis).
The flu virus is, in particular, a rather striking study of this process. Consider the vast majority of fowl who carry the virus asymptomatically. For them, flu is not a disease, but rather a simple hitch-hiker. For humans, you can predict the severity of a flu outbreak based on how well adjusted the virus is to humans. The more avian characteristics it has, the worse the symptoms and mortality are likely to be. At the same time, an ill adjusted virus is much less likely to spread.
One other thing to consider is that the flu virus itself does not exist in isolation from itself. The Spanish flu of 1918 is an interesting case in this respect. It was, as I alluded to before, ill adjusted to human hosts. At the same time, it was particularly communicable; something of an oddity for a flu with so many avian characteristics. It did kill a large number of people, but within a year or two the major damage had been done and the pandemic was over.
Why? Well, certainly a large portion of the human population that had become exposed but had not died were now immune. More importantly, though, the strain mutated and became better adjusted to human hosts. This strain, H1N1, then became the predominant form of the "seasonal flu". It is likely that you have become infected by a descendent of this very strain, probably many times over.
I would not fear this virus for the same reason that I do not fear Ebola or Marburg virus. Viruses that kill quickly and efficiently do not spread as well as those that cause some disease but allow their host to continue functioning more or less normally (all the while exposing many more to the virus). Of course, this is little comfort to the dead, and there will always be those who die from any outbreak (just go look at the annual death toll from "seasonal flu"). It is far, far from a reason to start predicting the end of humanity.
One final note on the bioweapon/bioterror angle: if you follow the thinking of the people that actually contemplate the use of bioweapons, you'll find that bioweapons are only ever considered as denial-of-area or knock-down agents. That is, you can use a bioweapon to prevent your enemy from gaining or holding a strategic position. What you don't find is anyone proposing to use a bioweapon as a coup de grace. Those that study these things understand that any biological agent has an in-built time limit on its effectiveness.
Edit: I just realized I should mention that while I don't appreciate the sensationalism espoused by the scientific press, H5N1 is a very real, very troubling threat. It won't wipe out the human race, but it does have a good chance of setting humanity back a decade or two (not from disease, but primarily from the knock-on effects of people reacting to the disease, halting productive work and worldwide travel). In my mind, though, this is all the more reason to publish this research and, while we're at it, pour some more money into the worldwide flu monitoring network.