It's a couple of years old, but this is a fascinating paper on Microsoft's Watson error reporting and analysis technology, used to debug issues in products across Microsoft at the scale of billions of PCs.
This morning, Representatives Peter DeFazio (D-OR) and Jason Chaffetz (R-UT) introduced the SHIELD Act, which would create a "loser pays" system for some types of patent litigants. The bill is meant to stymie companies that do nothing more than file patent lawsuits.
That's a good start.
It'd be great if someone could simply write some sort of universal software checker that sniffs out any program's potential flaws. One small problem: Such a checker can't exist. [...] But while a universal checker is impossible, verifying that a particular program will always work as promised is merely an exceedingly-freakin'-difficult task.
And those can always be solved by throwing money at the problem.
Some clever solutions to packaging things without packaging that contributes to waste.
I never heard about Karlin before today, but he was a researcher who conducted studies on the design and functionality of the telephone and telephone numbers. Interesting cross-section of psychology and technology.
The goal is to become HBO faster than HBO can become us.
— Ted Sarandos, Arrested Development, House of Cards, and the Future of Netflix

So, no special characters. That sounds like a great plan, AT&T...
In which machine learning cracks the code of a 250-year old secret society.
Our brains have two basic problem-solving strategies. Exploitation means taking advantage of what you already know, concentrating deeply on a current task to optimize performance and efficiency. Exploration means taking a step back from the task at hand to allow your mind to roam flexibly among alternatives.
Entrepreneurs appear to be more able to invoke both the logical and creative parts of the brain simultaneously when engaging in exploration than others tested in the study, though they were not actually any more likely to engage in exploration.
And speaking of theft and showbusiness, The Verge has a brief look at Vegas and its anti-cheating technologies.