July 2015 Archive
631.
Git 2.5.0 (github.com)
632.
A mixed-format, mixed-architecture, mixed-sided diskette (2008) (trixter.oldskool.org)
633.
New Macbook overheats in Hangouts and Skype, microphone input garbled (discussions.apple.com)
634.
Mozilla Games Technology Roadmap (blog.mozilla.org)
635.
See Android Go (codingvelocity.com)
636.
Hacking Team Uses UEFI BiOS Rootkit to Keep RCS 9 Agent in Target Systems (blog.trendmicro.com)
637.
Thesis, Automattic, and WordPress: A Conflict of Ideology (poststatus.com)
638.
Spectacle: Write Your Slide Decks in JSX (spectacle.surge.sh)
639.
Chrome address spoofing vulnerability proof-of-concept for HTTPS (github.com)
640.
Immutable annotations for Java (immutables.github.io)
641.
ES6 in Depth: Classes (hacks.mozilla.org)
642.
Links as originally imagined were a separate layer of annotation on documents (hapgood.us)
643.
Practical attack against TLS/SSL and RC4 (rc4nomore.com)
644.
Argentinean programmer's house raided after he found a security breach (twitter.com)
645.
Documenting your PostgreSQL database (craigkerstiens.com)
646.
Learn to read Korean in 15 minutes (ryanestradadotcom.tumblr.com)
647.
A social-network illusion that makes things appear more popular than they are (phys.org)
648.
Go-fuzz: Randomized testing for Go (github.com)
649.
New law proposal makes The Netherlands privacy-unfriendly (voys.nl)
650.
Ask HN: How do I stay motivated to learn?
651.
Telegram Suffers DDOS, Criticism For Enabling Human Rights Lawyers In China (techcrunch.com)
652.
In 1900, Los Angeles had a bike highway (vox.com)
653.
Ask HN: Talk me through the acquihire process
654.
Show HN: Actor Messaging platform (github.com)
655.
Ebola vaccine is 'potential game-changer' (bbc.com)
656.
The View from the Front Seat of the Google Self-Driving Car, Chapter 2 (medium.com)
657.
Office of Personnel Management Says Hackers Got Data of Millions of Individuals (nytimes.com)
658.
A Tiny Bank’s Surreal Trip Through a Fraud Prosecution (nytimes.com)
659.
5 out of 7 .io nameservers appear to be down (pulse.turbobytes.com)
660.
Why slow thinking wins (bostonglobe.com)