April 2013 Archive
12031.
The vanishing personal site (zeldman.com)
12032.
Crowd’s Video Evidence From Boston Bombing Deputizes Nation (bloomberg.com)
12033.
Why 2013 Is An Awesome Year To Start Up (fastcolabs.com)
12034.
How Did the World's Rich Get That Way? Luck (businessweek.com)
12035.
How DigiCash Blew Everything (cryptome.org)
12036.
Yoda teaches APIs (blog.mashape.com)
12037.
AngularJS Fundamentals in 60-ish Minutes (weblogs.asp.net)
12038.
Go ahead chat up that attractive person - Carol Syndrome (plus.maths.org)
12039.
Do You Have A Big Data Problem? (thomaslarock.com)
12040.
Twisted Python: The engine of your Internet (programming.oreilly.com)
12041.
JBoss Application Server renamed "WildFly" (wraltechwire.com)
12042.
Deploying to your cloud with FriendCode (blog.friendco.de)
12043.
How a North Carolina Bill Puts the Crowd Back in Crowdfunding (wac6.com)
12044.
When not to use jQuery and what to do instead. (cwebbdesign.tumblr.com)
12045.
Why Word Cloud Doesn’t Make It Rain (blog.getsoshio.com)
12046.
Ici - Wikipedia Articles Here (inkdroid.org)
12047.
Figure out what you suck at. Damnit. (nemrow.tumblr.com)
12048.
The North Korean spy who blew up a plane (bbc.co.uk)
12049.
Netflix plans to bull ahead with original content strategy after House of Cards (thenextweb.com)
12050.
James Hanson Nuclear Power Saves Lives (businessinsider.com)
12051.
New Healthcare.gov will be built with Jekyll and managed using Prose.io (hhs.gov)
12052.
Socratic questions in computing (Google doc) (docs.google.com)
12053.
Coolest Offices in Tech – London vs. The Valley (adzuna.co.uk)
12054.
Bringing to Life an Open Source Software Project via Github & Jekyll (compositecode.com)
12055.
Japanese people who "abuse" Tor could be blocked (bbc.co.uk)
12056.
Get Maid now lets you book on-demand or schedule appointments in advance (getmaid.com)
12057.
Run, walk, and jump with the Oculus Rift using Virtuix's 360-degree treadmill (theverge.com)
12058.
What I'd like to see this Earth Day: More Fracking (theglobeandmail.com)
12059.
IBM 402 from 1948 still in use at Texas firm (kottke.org)
12060.
World’s largest video game: PONG on the Cira Centre (technical.ly)