September 2012 Archive
13171.
HP announces Spectre One (theverge.com)
13172.
Check private headers against new class-dumps (github.com)
13173.
SWIFT Reimagines Banks' Role in Commerce for a Data-Driven Future (americanbanker.com)
13174.
Open Coffee London Group on Meetup Hacked (meetup.com)
13175.
Ask HN:Need a company to OCR the historical record ()
13176.
Nudging Retirement Savings: A New Approach to Pensions (professorhollybell.com)
13177.
Mavericks Invent Future Internet Where Cisco Is Meaningless (wired.com)
13178.
David Kirkpatrick: Why Techonomy Detroit? (techonomy.com)
13179.
Open Shading Language Node in Blender Cycles (blendernation.com)
13180.
Importing local mailboxes to Django model (pypi.python.org)
13181.
The Osborne Effect: What Nokia and RIMM are doing wrong (fool.com)
13182.
HP Spectre One Desktop (curiousrat.com)
13183.
Mobile malware has become a profitable industry (net-security.org)
13184.
Requesting a Guest Blog Post on Technology (antjanus.com)
13185.
What Bruce Willis tells us about digital media and the future of print (peecho.com)
13186.
Hack.lu 2012 - security conference (2012.hack.lu)
13187.
We're 5 YC alums, trying to change the world. Join us at 42Floors. ()
13188.
Google autocomplete: The Internet where you are (bbc.co.uk)
13189.
How to convert DVD to Nokia Lumia 820 (dvdconvertersoft.com)
13190.
Growth Hacking and B2B Startups: Show me the money (rocketwatcher.com)
13191.
7 Million Acts of Love (indiegogo.com)
13192.
Gravity: SASS powered HTML5 and CSS3 framework (gravityframework.com)
13193.
Why you should use streams in node (substack.net)
13194.
Dashlane’s New Online Security Breach Alerts Keep You Safe (dashlane.com)
13195.
Ask HN: Anyone have experience with open-source alternatives to Parse? ()
13196.
Ask HN: How much does a web agency charge in Canada/Toronto, per hour? ()
13197.
Muscles that do nothing can keep you warm and thin (newscientist.com)
13198.
Show HN: Talll.com for Tech and Filll.com for Finance ()
13199.
Where good ideas come from: a quick overview (asserttrue.blogspot.com)
13200.
Everything’s amazing, nothing's perfect (theverge.com)