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Let AI do the hard parts of your holiday shopping (blog.google)

Stories related to "Let AI do the hard parts of your holiday shopping" across the full archive.

Let AI do the hard parts of your holiday shopping (blog.google)
Wiping data from a hard drive: /dev/zero or /dev/random - what is more secure and why? (stackoverflow.com)
BitForce SHA256 Hardware Bitcoin Miner (butterflylabs.com)
Gainframe - Hardware for Software Freedom (gainframe.com)
What Hardware Powers Etsy.com? (codeascraft.etsy.com)
Think hard to fly: Chinese scientists unveil mind-controlled drone (rt.com)
Farming hard drives: how Backblaze weathered the Thailand drive crisis (blog.backblaze.com)
Hardware-based Full Disk Encryption (In)Security (www1.cs.fau.de)
Introducing the Pass-Pal – A hardware password & token storage device (ob-security.info)
TREZOR - A hardware bitcoin wallet (bitcointrezor.com)
Busting 4 Modern Hardware Myths - Are Memory, HDDs, and SSDs Really Random Access? (highscalability.com)
“Well, that was unexpected…”: The Raspberry Pi’s Hardware Random Number Generator (scruss.com)
Intel SHA Extensions for hardware offloading of SHA-1 and SHA-256 (software.intel.com)
Russ’ 10 Ingredient Recipe for Making 1 Million TPS on $5K Hardware (highscalability.com)
Hard disk hacking (backdooring HD controller firmware) (spritesmods.com)
Stealthy Dopant-Level Hardware Trojans (people.umass.edu)
Hosting backdoors in hardware (blogs.oracle.com)
Why Hardware Development is Hard (danluu.com)
Farming hard drives: 2 years and $1M later (blog.backblaze.com)
Backblaze Blog: What Hard Drive Should I Buy? (blog.backblaze.com)
Data storage capacity is enhanced by mixing hard and soft magnetic materials (phys.org)
Hardware Scrambling – No More Password Leaks (lightbluetouchpaper.org)
CLaSH: a functional hardware description language (hackage.haskell.org)
Hackaday Open Hardware Competition (hackaday.io)
Atomic<> weapons: The C++11 Memory Model and Modern Hardware (concurrencyfreaks.blogspot.com)
1 second per second is harder than it sounds (rachelbythebay.com)
Eliminating Global Interpreter Locks in Ruby through Hardware Transactional Memory (PPoPP '14) (researcher.watson.ibm.com)
When I was in graduate school, transactional memory was an ivory tower pipe dream, but now it's something that actually exists in hardware you can buy. It seems worthwhile to start learning about how to use it.
PicoLisp in Hardware (PilMCU) (mail-archive.com)
oculus has opensourced the DK1 hardware and firmware (github.com)
Backblaze: Hard Drive Reliability Update (backblaze.com)