August 2012 Archive
421.
Stanford Biologist and Computer Scientist Discover the 'Anternet' (engineering.stanford.edu)
422.
Lisp-like html as a replacement to bbcode/markup/textile (94.249.190.129)
423.
Amazing CSS3 3D popup book (2012.beercamp.com)
424.
Where did the Tweetbot for Mac Alpha go? (tapbots.com)
425.
The Emerging Revolution in Game Theory (technologyreview.com)
426.
N64js: an N64 emulator in JavaScript (hulkholden.github.com)
427.
Chinese dev steals US HTML5 Game engine, US hosts won't close down the copy (techinasia.com)
428.
Flash Player exits Android (bbc.com)
429.
Abuse of Youtube's copyright infringement claim process for doxxing purposes (owningyourshit.blogspot.ca)
430.
Valve Finds Value In Open-Source Drivers (phoronix.com)
431.
Good News: Craigslist drops exclusive license to your posts (eff.org)
432.
Greg Kouri, PayPal co-founder, dies at 51 (miamiherald.com)
433.
Advice I Wish I Could've Given Myself 5 Years Ago (viniciusvacanti.com)
434.
Dalton Caldwell: App.net is not Vaporware (daltoncaldwell.com)
435.
Chill out, listen to some rain (raining.fm)
436.
Doodle Jump Recreated in HTML5 ...with source (cssdeck.com)
437.
Interpreting some of Twitter’s API changes (marco.org)
438.
Dark matter scaffolding of universe detected for the first time (ns.umich.edu)
439.
GNU Emacs ported to Android (play.google.com)
440.
How AngularJS helped us ship our mobile site quicker - Part 1 (Directives) (goodfil.ms)
441.
Growth Hacking 101: Your First 500,000 Users (slideshare.net)
442.
Parrondo's Paradox: How two ugly parents can make a beautiful baby (datagenetics.com)
443.
Show HN: We built a voice to music AI app in 54 hours at a hackathon (blog.beatmaticapp.com)
444.
Apple Suspends Over-the-Phone AppleID Password Resets (wired.com)
445.
American law is patent nonsense (ft.com)
446.
Firefox 3D view (developer.mozilla.org)
447.
My Python Code for the Netflix Prize (github.com)
448.
Usenet – what have you become? (90percentofeverything.com)
449.
1and1 ask for passwords over the phone (blog.tim-rogers.co.uk)
450.
Dropbox confirms it got hacked, will offer two-factor authentication (arstechnica.com)