30 MOST READ Tech Stories of Q1, 2019

Written by hackernoontech | Published 2019/03/20
Tech Story Tags: hackernoon-top-story | hacker-stories | reading-time | hacker-reading | hackernoon-letter

TLDRvia the TL;DR App

Since you opened this email, you already know that Hacker Noon is a place where people actually read.

When considering features for Hacker Noon 2.0 (coming soon…), it is very exciting to imagine how software can drive our goals. What’s our critical number when it comes to deciding story quality?

Time Reading.

How many minutes, hours, days, or even months have people spent actually reading each story? This is a measure of quality. Quality stories deserve more curation and distribution. Time reading is information we want to publicly provide, for the benefit of both our writers and readers.

Before we dive into this quarter’s top stories…Shoutout to our investors of the week! Cheers to those who make it possible for us to build a better tech site:

Here are the 30 MOST READ tech stories on Hacker Noon in 2019, so far:

tagged/software-development

Four Startup Engineering Killers by Nemil Dalal Startup engineering is different from any other type of software engineering. It demands short- and medium-term productivity, relative to the “right way” of building systems. It values people who are able to iterate quickly and are comfortable with hacky code. It rewards pragmatism in technology choices versus picking the most hyped — or most stable — technology.

The Product Owner — Scrum’s great Success and Failure by Sunil Jolly You don’t have to have a “Product Owner” to be Agile. There’s a complaint about Agile development which is: “Scrum is so well known and so widely used, that people often mistake Scrum for Agile development.” It’s a fair criticism. The prime example of this is the “Product Owner” role.

Interviews with Three Amazing Female Web Developers Who Promote Diversity and Inclusion in Tech. The Stories Behind BlackTechPipeline, @WomenTechBot, @React_India, and @WomenCoders01 by Marina Vorontsova. Not long ago I started a series of articles on women in technology at our corporate blog, at soshace.com. And so far I’ve managed to publish just one that featured five outstanding women who were promoting coding education among children, teenage girls, mothers who recently delivered babies, and different other minority groups. I am passionate about promoting equality and diversity in various fields, be it science or creative writing.

Top Software Development Trends in 2019 by Ryan RoyThe growth of every industry majorly depends on the innovations introduced in that field. No static industry can see such remarkable results and this is the hard work of full-stack developers that we can view some awesome changing trends in this industry.

tagged/bitcoin

The reports of bitcoin environmental damage are garbage by Robert Sharratt I write this article because I’m sick of being confronted by people, even others in crypto, about crypto allegedly being an environmental disaster. It isn’t. That is an egregious lie.

tagged/cybersecurity

A hacker intercepted your Wi-Fi traffic and stole your contacts, passwords, and financial data. Here’s how. by Patrick F. Wilbur Whats the recipe for a public Wi-Fi network? 1. Use absolutely no encryption at all, or 2. Use a pre-shared key and tell everyone (no different than #1). Public Wi-Fi is intentionally insecure and susceptible to several modes of attack.

Operating System for Penetration Testing in a Nutshell; Kali Linux vs Parrot Security OS by PALAKOLLU SRI MANIKANTA An overview of the two most popular operating systems used by most of the security professionals.

tagged/statistics

Gaming the lottery: How one winner used math to overcome the odds by Bryn Solomon Each week for the last 6 years (2012–2018), I was playing the lottery to win. Not just hoping to win — playing with a ‘positive expected value’ (a mathematical expectation to win rather than lose, on average, over time). In June 2018 this particular window of opportunity closed, so I’ve decided to share more about the winning model and reveal some closely guarded secrets from the clandestine world of professional gambling.

tagged/programming

How I learned 15 programming languages, and why your kids will too by CrypteriumA simple tale of a programmer yet a good intro read to the world of tech for regular readers. The story shows the importance of believing in your dreams and significance of strong family relations.

Major Programming Trends to Prepare for in 2019 by Constantin Some of the major programming trends to prepare for to help you stay at the top of your game in 2019 — as well as a look back at the key programming themes of 2018.

3 Programming Languages to Learn in 2019 by Tim HanIf you are new to the coding world, I recommend these languages.

Programming in Rust: the good, the bad, the ugly. By Brenden MatthewsThis post is about my experience learning Rust by solving every CtCI problem live on Twitch, an unfinished project.

Best Coding Languages to Learn in 2019 by Rafi Zikavashvili From a developer’s perspective, a programming language is a tool and choosing the right one will influence one’s career, economic prospects, and future happiness.

tagged/python

Top Python Web Development Frameworks to Learn in 2019 by PALAKOLLU SRI MANIKANTAA quick overview of trending frameworks in python and what you should need to learn if you want to start your career in web development using python.

R vs Python: What’s The Difference? by Muammer Hüseyinoğlu The challenge under ten categories.

Are your Python programs running slow? Here’s how you can make them 7x faster by Rishabh AgrawalWe all know that Python is much slower than statically-typed programming languages like C, C++, Java and some dynamic languages too like JavaScript and PHP. Let’s look at the reasons why Python is much slower compared to these languages and what can we do to increase its execution speed.

tagged/javascript

Handtrack.js: Hand Tracking Interactions in the Browser using Tensorflow.js and 3 lines of code by Victor DibiaHandtrack.js library allows you track a user’s hand (bounding box) from an image in any orientation, in 3 lines of code.

The “Backendification” of Frontend Development by Mike Taylor Are many of the modern frontend tools and practices just technical debt in disguise?

12 Concepts That Will Level Up Your JavaScript Skills by Nick Scialli #1: Value vs. Reference Variable Assignment: Understanding how JavaScript assigns to variables is foundational to writing bug-free JavaScript. If you don’t understand this, you could easily write code that unintentionally changes values.

tagged/crypto

Surviving Crypto Winter — Part Three: Why Privacy Coins Will Rule the Next Bull Run by Daniel Jeffries Welcome to part three of the Surviving Crypto Winter series. This time, I profile the an entire category of projects: privacy coins.

3 Moments in History that Explain the ICO Bubble by Haseeb QureshiWhen the bubble finally popped last year, the “market cap” of all crypto fell over $700B, an 85% drop from its peak in January — steeper than the dotcom bubble’s 78% crash. The media gawked at this collapse, and as usual, proclaimed this was the nail in the coffin for cryptocurrencies.

As Cardano Gears up for Shelley, here’s Three Things You Need to Know by Elliot Hill As the end of Q1 2019 approaches, Shelley’s progress marches on relentlessly. But for the uninitiated, navigating the shift into a new phase of Cardano’s development may appear overwhelming. Here are three key areas you’ll need to know about Shelley, ahead of its release.

tagged/science

Quantum Entanglement & Simulated Reality by Rob Adamson Einstein and Bohr had a great debate at The Solvay Conference in Belgium in 1927. Here was a gathering of some of the most intelligent people on Earth.

tagged/data-science

How It Feels to Learn Data Science in 2019 by Thomas Nield Seeing the (Random) Forest Through the (Decision) Trees.

tagged/software-architecture

Is a Shared Database in Microservices Actually an Anti-pattern? By Roman Krivtsov If you look at books, blog posts and tweets about microservices architecture (there are already millions of them), you’ll see that everyone declares nearly the same idea — microservices must be independent. That completely makes sense. In words. In reality? Not so much.

tagged/machine-learning

Thinking of Self-Studying Machine Learning? Remind yourself of these 6 things by Daniel Bourke I’m a self-taught Machine Learning Engineer; here’s what I’d tell myself if I started again.

tagged/education

How my Friend Got an Internship at Tesla After Only 8 Months of Coding by Michaël Trazzi “Hey, you’re Elon’s best friend now, huh?” I asked my friend, who has been interning at Tesla for the past 3 months. “You have no idea. For a few hours, my desk was like five meters from Elon’s.” “No fucking way” I shouted. “It’s true. The first day they were like ‘here is your desk’. I literally freaked out. I think Elon could have read my code if he wanted.”

tagged/startups

Five Surprising Things in Lyft’s S-1 by Justine and Oliva Moore. Like almost everyone else in tech, we were excited to see Lyft’s S-1 drop. The rideshare industry has fundamentally changed how millions of people (including us!) get around on a daily basis, which is an incredible accomplishment given that Lyft and Uber have been around for less than a decade. It’s rare to see a product reach near ubiquity over a relatively short period of time, and this feels like a unique opportunity to watch a transformational consumer tech company debut on the public market.

Not All Marketplaces are Created Equal: Tales of a Marketplace Founder by Dave Lu One thing I’ve clearly learned over the years building marketplaces like eBay, Luxe and Pared is that not all marketplaces are created equal. Marketplaces have evolved over time.

tagged/indian-startups

Zoho Mafia: 22 Companies Founded by Former Zoho Employees by Naveen DA This could be the first time you are coming across the term Zoho Mafia, but it’s an entity that creates more than 6,000 jobs in Chennai alone and earns more than $500 million in revenue.

tagged/product-management

Product Management skills NO ONE talks about ;) by Taruna Manchanda Let me tell you a secret that the product management industry is hiding from you, or maybe not saying it out loud — we don’t care ‘too’ much about the hard skills. And what hard skills? Writing a PRD? Doing user interviews? Understanding UX? Knowing business and tech?

tagged/management

The worst career advice I ever received by Nick CaldwellChaos isn’t a ladder to climb. It’s unwise to manage your career through the randomness of the universe, decisions made by other people, and org chart Brownian motion. Even when your manager, company, and peers have your best wishes in mind, you still must manage your own career with intent.

’Til Next Time,Hacker Noon Tech

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Published by HackerNoon on 2019/03/20