July 2013 Archive
511.
Show HN: This page will disappear in 10,000 views (blinklink.me)
512.
Winklevoss twins to offer Bitcoin ETF (sec.gov)
513.
Docker, Containers, and the Future of Application Delivery (slideshare.net)
514.
Argentinian President Cristina Fernandez's tweets translation from last night (gist.github.com)
515.
FB event to walk to NSA's Dagger Complex results in a visit by the German police (thelocal.de)
516.
Poll: What do you use for Unix process management/monitoring?
517.
Explanation of the Asiana SF crash by a former UAL captain (pprune.org)
518.
Hyperloop lets you travel on a resonant acoustic wave? (conscienceofanentrepreneur.blogspot.com)
519.
Chuck Feeney: The Billionaire Who Is Trying To Go Broke (forbes.com)
520.
AngularJS: an Overview (glennstovall.com)
521.
Useful GitHub patterns (blog.quickpeople.co.uk)
522.
Microsoft’s shares sink by more than 10% (google.com)
523.
Quinoa should be taking over the world. This is why it isn’t (washingtonpost.com)
524.
Do Not Track is not respected on mozilla.org (bugzilla.mozilla.org)
525.
Twitter Bootstrap Now Powering 1% of The Web (blog.meanpath.com)
526.
Russia won’t extradite Snowden to US – Kremlin (rt.com)
527.
Justice Dept. defends secret rulings in new spy court filing (gigaom.com)
528.
The FuqIt Web Framework (github.com)
529.
Monads Made Difficult (stephendiehl.com)
530.
Normal vs. Fat-tailed Distributions (vudlab.com)
531.
The Go 1.1 scheduler (morsmachine.dk)
532.
A 6502 emulator in Common Lisp [pdf] (redlinernotes.com)
533.
Real-life Tron on an Apple II GS (blog.danielwellman.com)
534.
You May Not Like Weev, But Your Online Freedom Depends on His Appeal (wired.com)
535.
My self-published book on being a great developer (theseniorsoftwareengineer.com)
536.
Philosophy and "for" loops — more from Go and Rust (lwn.net)
537.
The Web’s longest nightmare ends: Eolas patents are dead on appeal (arstechnica.com)
538.
PRISM: The Amazingly Low Cost of ­Using Big Data to Know More About You (highscalability.com)
539.
Microsoft's Surface sales figures are in, and they're hideous (theregister.co.uk)
540.
Art prodigy poses 'ethical nightmare' for parents (bbc.co.uk)