2012 Archive
12691.
Killing Hollywood Will Require Learning Hollywood’s Game (pandodaily.com)
12692.
Web Design Pioneer Hillman Curtis passed away (nytimes.com)
12693.
Goldman Sachs: GS Collections source code released (github.com)
12694.
Pre-flight cracks in 787 engine (ntsb.gov)
12695.
In over my head. How can I work with more advanced programmers? (arstechnica.com)
12696.
Student Engineers: Apply to work at 170+ startups with one Common Application (redeye.firstround.com)
12697.
What Will Replace The Internet? (2000) (time.com)
12698.
Google shutting down Picnik (blog.picnik.com)
12699.
Integration testing Backbone.js (open.bekk.no)
12700.
Botnet Responsible for 18% of World’s Spam Knocked Offline (mashable.com)
12701.
Parrot Learns to Drive Robotic Buggy His Owner Designed and Built (sites.google.com)
12702.
Nvidia Loses Huge GPU Order Due To Linux Blob (phoronix.com)
12703.
Exploiting filepicker.io (digitalmisinformation.posterous.com)
12704.
Raspberry Pi Used to Replace 30-Foot GSM Base Station and Create Mobile Network (techcrunch.com)
12705.
Virtual memory overhead for trees (github.com)
12706.
Ask HN: How do you hire contractors? ()
12707.
Stripe: Introducing Answers (stripe.com)
12708.
A Raspberry Pi (VAX) Cluster (designspark.com)
12709.
Meet the World’s Cheapest Venture Capitalist (wired.com)
12710.
Did Techcrunch get Hacked? (technews.techcrunch.com)
12711.
Pycoder's Weekly (pycoders.com)
12712.
Perlsecret - Perl secret operators and constants (search.cpan.org)
12713.
It's never too late to become an entrepreneur (dailybreeze.com)
12714.
Swiftype for Mobile: Full-text search for iOS and mobile Web (swiftype.com)
12715.
Google: Yes, Sponsored Post Campaign Was Ours But Not What We Signed-Up For (searchengineland.com)
12716.
'Petridish' Aims To Crowdfund Science And Research Projects (techcrunch.com)
12717.
NASA holds a contest for programmers who can improve access to its data archives (arstechnica.com)
12718.
Pieceable is acquired by Facebook (pieceable.com)
12719.
The Struggle (techcrunch.com)
12720.
Consider Not Setting Goals in 2013 (blogs.hbr.org)