February 2013 Archive
841.
Computer science students successfully boycott class final (jhunewsletter.com)
842.
Suffering From Depression? Don't Do That Start-up (jacquesmattheij.com)
843.
Hackers Turn Burger King’s Tweet Stream Into A Whopper Of A Mess (techcrunch.com)
844.
Free Pascal 2.6.2 is released (lazarus.freepascal.org)
845.
The Twilight Years of Cap'n Crunch (2007) (online.wsj.com)
846.
The world's smallest ARM chip announced, designed for swallowable computers (wired.com)
847.
Vulnerabilities in dozens of Military and Pentagon websites (pastebin.com)
848.
Meteor 0.5.7 released: major scaling update, new DDP version, EJSON (meteor.com)
849.
Lucky Thirteen: Breaking the TLS and DTLS Record Protocols (isg.rhul.ac.uk)
850.
Court Of Human Rights: Convictions For File-Sharing Violate Human Rights (falkvinge.net)
851.
Hapi, new Node.js framework (a prologue) (hueniverse.com)
852.
Introduction to Graph Theory: Finding The Shortest Path (Part 2) (maxburstein.com)
853.
In Defense of "The Big Bang Theory" (ideonexus.com)
854.
Ubuntu Smartphone Shipping in October (blogs.wsj.com)
855.
Dalek designer Ray Cusick passes away aged 84 (theregister.co.uk)
856.
25 Years to Mac - How Ubuntu Pushed Me Away from the PC (randomdrake.com)
857.
World's Dumbest Rebrand? (inc.com)
858.
Wi-Fi patent troll hit with racketeering suit emerges unscathed (arstechnica.com)
859.
A simple Motion Blur demo using WebGL (dl.dropbox.com)
860.
Pinterest Completes $200M Funding at $2.5B Valuation (allthingsd.com)
861.
My New FiberHouse in Kansas City (feld.com)
862.
Password Cracking AES-256 DMGs and Epic Self-Pwnage (blog.whitehatsec.com)
863.
FPGA x86 Processor (code.google.com)
864.
Haskell I/O is pure (chris-taylor.github.com)
865.
Free Source Code Available To Download (blog.apptopia.com)
866.
As promised, Kim Dotcom starts payouts for Mega vulnerability reward program (thenextweb.com)
867.
Healthcare tech ideas we'd like to fund (rockhealth.com)
868.
Clang based documentation generator for C and C++ (jessevdk.github.com)
869.
How Lockheed Martin's 'Kill Chain' Stopped SecurID Attack (darkreading.com)
870.
Forgotten by the Future, Some Take the Internet Into Their Own Hands (motherboard.vice.com)