July 2013 Archive
1021.
Stanford students capture the flight of birds on very high-speed video (news.stanford.edu)
1022.
Nation Will Gain by Discussing Surveillance, Expert Tells Privacy Board (nytimes.com)
1023.
Is Sugar Really Toxic? (blogs.scientificamerican.com)
1024.
ADHD Drugs Don't Boost Kids' Grades, Studies Find (wsj.com)
1025.
On why removing features makes people unhappy (dgsiegel.net)
1026.
Germany's Solar Industry Is Imploding (forbes.com)
1027.
Final Fantasy VII is available on Steam (store.steampowered.com)
1028.
SEO in JavaScript Web Apps (blog.alexmaccaw.com)
1029.
Flying a Drone in First Person View Using the Oculus Rift (laughingsquid.com)
1030.
Why You Shouldn’t Join Medium (blog.spanishcurls.com)
1031.
Global land temperatures since 1900 visualized (halftone.co)
1032.
Watch Out For The Balkans (techcrunch.com)
1033.
Hand-written lexer in Javascript compared to the regex-based ones (eli.thegreenplace.net)
1034.
In times of change, make tires (medium.com)
1035.
BitTorrent Sync comes to Android (play.google.com)
1036.
Highly customizable checkboxes and radio buttons (damirfoy.com)
1037.
Who Makes Below Minimum Wage in the Mechanical Turk Sweatshop? (priceonomics.com)
1038.
Poll: Do you encrypt your email?
1039.
Linux developer Seth Vidal killed in Hit and Run accident on his bike. (wral.com)
1040.
Iran Removed From All Major Travel Sites (airliners.net)
1041.
What Is It Like To Have a Photographic Memory? (slate.com)
1042.
Show HN: REST API for Global Address Verification (lob.com)
1043.
Anti-corruption blogger Navalny sentenced to 5 years behind bars (rt.com)
1044.
The History of Ctrl + Alt + Delete (m.mentalfloss.com)
1045.
Why is the mobile web slow? (codenameone.com)
1046.
Yahoo acquires Xobni (allthingsd.com)
1047.
Tesla: almost at 100000 votes ()
1048.
This MIT Website Tracks Your Digital Footprint Through Gmail (newsfeed.time.com)
1049.
How to Opt Out of AT&T's Plan to Sell Data About You and Your Smartphone Use (forbes.com)
1050.
How to design a multi-user ajax web application to be concurrently safe (stackoverflow.com)