By Dane Lyons So you want to earn a little spending crypto in exchange for your thoughtful Hackernoon content. You could try selling shady links on the black market...but you know that's not right. And getting a sponsorship deal isn't easy without risking life and limb...Read the full story By hackernoon EDWARDS CO June 10, 2020 -- Hacker Noon, the technology publishing platform serving 4M readers per month, today announced a $1M strategic investment from Coil, the San Francisco-based startup designed to help creators monetize content and provide a premium experience to consumers. Additionally, the companies kicked off a three year partnership focused on Web Monetization for contributing writers. Web Monetization is an open specification that is freely available to any monetization service provider who wants to support sites like Hacker Noon. Read the full story By David Smooke The internet is the greatest invention of the last hundred years. Yet, much of it is counterproductive, with companies working against each other to "own the user." Paywalls, popup ads and excessive data collection damage the end user's experience, efficiency of time, and ability to collect micropayments. Read the full story By Raphael I had to settle a performance discussion within my team. Because of a simple PR, I started a 2 weeks journey in the dark twists and turns of javascript. To save you a lot of pain and frustrating questions, I sum up my research in this really long post. I tried my best to show you the train of thoughts but if you don’t care about the details, you can jump to the end for the TL;DR section.Read the full story By SimilarWeb Since Wikipedia was founded in 2001, people worldwide rely on the online encyclopedia to expand their horizons and read information on just about anything. As true as that is today, however, the site’s traffic trends tell a very different story. Read the full story By Matteo Pisani Surgically implanting a 3D-Touch Capacitive Trackpad in place of the original Analog Joystick.Read the full story By sezginege Each remote service that we call eventually going to fail. No matter how reliable they are, it is inevitable.Read the full story |
|