October 2013 Archive
481.
The Pricing Model That Increased Our Free Trial Signups by 358% (groovehq.com)
482.
Introducing Riak 2.0: Data Types, Strong Consistency, Full-Text Search (basho.com)
483.
Want people to trust you? Try apologising for the rain (bps-research-digest.blogspot.com)
484.
Is Glenn Greenwald the Future of News? (nytimes.com)
485.
Things You Can Do That Will Make You Happier (social-consciousness.com)
486.
Microsoft pays $100K bounty to hacker (business.financialpost.com)
487.
How to Build Willpower for the Weak (ideas.time.com)
488.
Physics: What We Do and Don’t Know (nybooks.com)
489.
NSA collects millions of e-mail address books globally (washingtonpost.com)
490.
Myst creator Cyan Worlds announces Kickstarter for Obduction (kickstarter.com)
491.
LeadGeni.us: User acquisition as a service (blog.mobileworks.com)
492.
The Bonehead Mistake That Brought Down an Online Drug-Dealing Empire (slate.com)
493.
Functional Python Made Easy (hackflow.com)
494.
Medium Maker (benjaminhawkyard.co.uk)
495.
On the Typography of Flight-Deck Documentation (1992) [pdf] (ti.arc.nasa.gov)
496.
Why Malcolm Gladwell Matters and Why That's Unfortunate (blog.chabris.com)
497.
On Hacking (stallman.org)
498.
Richard Stallman on the Painful Birth of GNU (blogs.computerworlduk.com)
499.
FeelBetterBot wants you to feel better (aaronbeppu.com)
500.
India to launch its first mission to Mars [video] (venturebeat.com)
501.
Using Katas to Improve Your Coding (blog.8thlight.com)
502.
Norwegian Town's Bright Idea Is A Shining Example Of Ingenuity (npr.org)
503.
Did Shutting Down Silk Road Make the World a More Dangerous Place? (theatlantic.com)
504.
Show HN: YinYang, a usable live programming language (research.microsoft.com)
505.
Surprisingly simple scheme for self-assembling robots (web.mit.edu)
506.
Security/Server Side TLS (wiki.mozilla.org)
507.
How to Design Great APIs [video] (blog.parse.com)
508.
London’s Great Exodus (nytimes.com)
509.
The Reliability of Go (andrewwdeane.blogspot.co.uk)
510.
Cash to the poor: Giving money directly works surprisingly well (economist.com)