March 2015 Archive
961.
An Economic Model of the Rise in Premarital Sex and Its De-Stigmatization [pdf] (jeremygreenwood.net)
962.
Wait ages for a bus and then two come along at once (jasmcole.com)
963.
Uber hauls GitHub into court to find who hacked database of 50,000 drivers (theregister.co.uk)
964.
Why Our Brains Love High Ceilings (fastcodesign.com)
965.
Orbit: EA's first open source project (blog.bioware.com)
966.
Most trading strategies are not tested rigorously enough (economist.com)
967.
Can Family Secrets Make You Sick? (npr.org)
968.
Burma's capital: a super-sized slice of post-apocalypse suburbia (theguardian.com)
969.
Yale Launches Expansion of the Department of Computer Science (news.yale.edu)
970.
LibreOffice Project's Check (viva64.com)
971.
Interview with Salvatore Sanfilippo (blog.fogcreek.com)
972.
Sam Simon, Who Helped Shape 'The Simpsons,' Dies at 59 (nytimes.com)
973.
Perfect Hashes and faster than memcmp (blogs.perl.org)
974.
Why Elton McDonald built a tunnel (macleans.ca)
975.
How cyclists, not drivers, first fought to pave US roads (vox.com)
976.
The Rise and Fall of RedBook (wired.com)
977.
Nintendo Opens Door to Smartphone Games (wsj.com)
978.
I signed up to write apps for my Amazon Echo, Amazon sent me an NDA
979.
Relaxing with Runcible, the circular 'anti-smartphone' (engadget.com)
980.
Sutro Tower: San Francisco's least appreciated landmark (sutrotower.org)
981.
How to set up your own free VPN server on AWS (webdigi.co.uk)
982.
Unikernels: Rise of the Virtual Library Operating System (queue.acm.org)
983.
Show HN: Madeon's Adventure Machine (madeon.fr)
984.
Introducing Fresco: a new image library for Android (code.facebook.com)
985.
Exponential Backoff and Jitter (awsarchitectureblog.com)
986.
Nasa's Dawn probe achieves orbit around Ceres (wired.com)
987.
Thinking about Thinking (2007) (the-programmers-stone.com)
988.
The Spy in the Sandbox: Practical Cache Attacks in JavaScript (arxiv.org)
989.
BBC gives children mini-computers in Make it Digital scheme (m.bbc.co.uk)
990.
Online Degrees That Are Seen as Official (nytimes.com)