April 2015 Archive
9721.
Yested – A Component Based Web Framework for Kotlin (yested.net)
9722.
Get a PhD – but leave academia as soon as you graduate (qz.com)
9723.
GitHub does not support ipv6 (ip6.nl)
9724.
The Next Great Gold Rush Won't Be Taking Place on Earth (mic.com)
9725.
Bad UX and User Self-Blame – “I'm sorry, I'm not a computer person.” (hanselman.com)
9726.
Show HN: Vidfit – get free webcam personal training session by subscribing ()
9727.
Ask HN: Digital Nomads: What tools do you use daily? ()
9728.
Ask HN: How to find right services/products to use in a startup? ()
9729.
What Rect is not the shortened of Rectangle? (medium.com)
9730.
Ask HN: Putting myself through college by freelancing? ()
9731.
Ask HN: Stripe failed payments ()
9732.
Apple opened its first showroom in kathmandu nepal last march 2014 (ktm2day.com)
9733.
Nepal Needs You (life.indiegogo.com)
9734.
A Simple Web Scraper in Go (schier.co)
9735.
Show HN: Rich Text Editor Meets Drag and Drop ()
9736.
The Information: How the Internet gets inside us. (2011) (newyorker.com)
9737.
A First Look at Reactive Cocoa 3.0 (blog.scottlogic.com)
9738.
Embarrassed to Wear an Apple Watch (medium.com)
9739.
Being fat’s gf (medium.com)
9740.
Order – a functional programming language implemented in the C preprocessor (rosettacode.org)
9741.
Why Coding Is Your Child’s Key to Unlocking the Future (wsj.com)
9742.
I built a simple sketching/writing app. What do you think? (sketchwrite.com)
9743.
Details of the sound system in Tesla’s Model S [pdf] (s1nn.de)
9744.
Childs bullying causes worse long-term mental health problems than maltreatment (sciencedaily.com)
9745.
Which do we kill more humanely, our pets or condemned prisoners? (themarshallproject.org)
9746.
Why Microsoft’s Strategy for iOS and Android Apps Is Genius (And Insidious) (arc.applause.com)
9747.
Rubycasts #2 – When APIs Change – TDD, VCR, Watch the Video Screencast (rubycasts.io)
9748.
Minimalistic Wikipedia in “real pages” (buk.io)
9749.
Tell HN: Find hackers to hack with ()
9750.
Is NASA one step closer to warp drive? (cnet.com)