June 2015 Archive
12751.
AI BUILDS MARIO LEVELS BY WATCHING YOUTUBE (wired.com)
12752.
College Majors Figure Big in Earnings (wsj.com)
12753.
15 startups in 21 months: Part 2 - raising $12M from Seqouia (medium.com)
12754.
How to sell your agency and freelance services at a higer price (codeable.io)
12755.
Hashicorp Publish Community Guidelines (hashicorp.com)
12756.
New Slack Homepage (slack.com)
12757.
Sneak Peek: TinyCat for Small Libraries (blog.librarything.com)
12758.
Engineering the Design Process at Auth0 (auth0.com)
12759.
​The AI That Learned Magic (the Gathering) (motherboard.vice.com)
12760.
Climb 'El Capitan' with Google's First Vertical Street View (engadget.com)
12761.
Building a guitar tuner with web audio (aerotwist.com)
12762.
ECMAScript 2015 Has Been Approved (infoq.com)
12763.
U.S., European authorities investigate possible new leaker (news.yahoo.com)
12764.
Videos of All the Functional Programming Talks at NDC Oslo (theburningmonk.com)
12765.
Symphony: Fixing Email, Collaboration and Social Networking (datamation.com)
12766.
Toward open source email previewing (civicrm.org)
12767.
Carbon Chauvinism (en.wikipedia.org)
12768.
Meet the Mysterious New Hacker Army Freaking Out the Middle East (buzzfeed.com)
12769.
Security Knowledge Framework (securityknowledgeframework.org)
12770.
On Circa News, algorithms, and business models (declan.io)
12771.
Toy-box-house (toyboxtinyhome.com)
12772.
Hubstomer (hubstomer.com)
12773.
Why Email Newsletters Are Having a Moment (medium.com)
12774.
Building a More Interoperable Web with Microsoft Edge (blogs.windows.com)
12775.
Learning Django Web Development (ratancs.github.io)
12776.
How to make a Sega Neptune (longhornengineer.com)
12777.
NYC Consumer Affairs Dept. Finds Whole Foods Overcharging Customers (nbcnewyork.com)
12778.
Clara M. Davis and the wisdom of letting children choose their own diets (ncbi.nlm.nih.gov)
12779.
Strategies look beautiful on paper and ugly in reality. Like a photoshopped model (iafrikan.com)
12780.
Startups Finding the Best Employees Are Actually Employed (nytimes.com)