June 2014 Archive
1351.
They Came. They Sawed (2004) (texasmonthly.com)
1352.
Why The Student Loan Market Is Insane (businessweek.com)
1353.
Das Referenz: Wikipedia Redesigned for iPad (medium.com)
1354.
Nokia's New Homescreen Replacement App for Android (zlauncher.com)
1355.
Beach theft (en.wikipedia.org)
1356.
Show HN: Unicode glitch art iOS app (itunes.apple.com)
1357.
A Graph Processing System (2011) (infolab.stanford.edu)
1358.
Project Euler is partly back (projecteuler.net)
1359.
Telescope: Open-source Hacker News clone built with Meteor (telesc.pe)
1360.
How to Build a Home-Brew Radon Detector: Measure Radiation with a Webcam (spectrum.ieee.org)
1361.
Bitcoin Markets React to US Marshal Auction Close (buttercoinmarketupdate.posthaven.com)
1362.
The Disappearing Physicist and His Elusive Particle (nautil.us)
1363.
Speedometer: A Benchmark for Web App Responsiveness (webkit.org)
1364.
Palaeolithic diet: Should we all eat like cavepeople? (bbc.com)
1365.
Ask HN: Homogeneity of HN readers in terms of political views?
1366.
Is soccer anything more than Poisson noise? (physics.ucsd.edu)
1367.
Dear Google, it's not me. It's definitely you. (stjohnkarp.net)
1368.
YouTube's Biggest Draw Plays Games, Earns $4 Million a Year (online.wsj.com)
1369.
I got this Cease and Desist for scraping someone's site (dl.dropboxusercontent.com)
1370.
Rabbit-proof fence (en.wikipedia.org)
1371.
Bullshit (stoa.org.uk)
1372.
Losing A Lawsuit In The Philippines (empireflippers.com)
1373.
The increase of genetic complexity follows Moore’s law (2013) [pdf] (arxiv.org)
1374.
V initiative – Building tomorrow’s secure digital democracy (v-initiative.org)
1375.
Issues with Apple's iOS WebGL Implementation (codeflow.org)
1376.
TerraTech – Physics-based vehicle construction and combat (kickstarter.com)
1377.
Show HN: Create beautiful animated gifs of your apps (appgif.net)
1378.
Show HN: LGBT News – Hacker News for LGBT Topics (equaldex.com)
1379.
CanCanCan – Continuation of CanCan, the authorization Gem for Ruby on Rails. (github.com)
1380.
Turn your G4-era Mac into a next-gen Amiga (macworld.com)