October 2014 Archive
9871.
SaaSquatch Radio Ep3 Andrew Torba CEO of Kuhcoon (referralsaasquatch.com)
9872.
“Citizen Four” a Film by Laura Poitras (citizenfourfilm.com)
9873.
You Can Now Go to College in Germany for Free, No Matter Where You’re From (slate.com)
9874.
Rico – Turn your used smartphone into a smarthome device (kickstarter.com)
9875.
China-based Hive Offer Free and Unlimited Cloud Storage (beta.hive.im)
9876.
How to INSTALL JDK 7 ON YOSEMITE (gabrielrinaldi.me)
9877.
Severe Hand RSI Pain and Recovery (markmcb.com)
9878.
Nobody Knows What Running Looks Like (theatlantic.com)
9879.
How wolves change rivers – fascinating video (vimeo.com)
9880.
Introducing JokeMeUp (jokemeup.com)
9881.
“Did you mean?” experience in Ruby (github.com)
9882.
Avremu: An AVR Emulator Written in Pure LaTeX (gitlab.brokenpipe.de)
9883.
Bitcoin-aware person on streets of San Francisco (facebook.com)
9884.
Smaller – Batch Minify HTML, CSS and JavaScript Files (smallerapp.com)
9885.
Leaked – Tim Cook’s October 16th monologue notes (robservatory.com)
9886.
0 most creative 404 pages on the Internet (blog.trackduck.com)
9887.
Show HN: Dizzlike Dislike everything you want and share it with your friends (apps.facebook.com)
9888.
Projects fail slowly, and then all at once (biesnecker.com)
9889.
Xiaomi, Not Apple, Is Changing the Smartphone Industry (blogs.hbr.org)
9890.
South Korean ID numbers are “master keys for hackers” (bbc.com)
9891.
Why did StealthGenie get busted by the Feds? (blog.flexispy.com)
9892.
Univate: Your University is your best Incubator (univate.co)
9893.
Pokemon and Start-ups (brenthalliburton.com)
9894.
I was once proud to be called nerd (impressmyself.co)
9895.
Cab-Hailing App Hailo to Cease North American Operations (dcist.com)
9896.
Ask HN: We are running a contest, can you share your thoughts? ()
9897.
Microsoft releases patch for CVE-2014-4114 (Windows OLE packager vulnerability) (technet.microsoft.com)
9898.
Snapp – We deliver your files (getsnapp.com)
9899.
Show HN: SVG pinout of Tessel (pinboardjs.divshot.io)
9900.
A Supersecret Spacecraft Comes Back to Earth After Two Years (businessweek.com)