October 2015 Archive
16321.
Microsoft Surface Pro 4 (microsoftstore.com)
16322.
It’s Time for Microsoft to Reboot Office (wsj.com)
16323.
Apple Approves an App That Blocks Ads in Native Apps, Including Apple News (techcrunch.com)
16324.
There's too many programming languages (pointersgonewild.com)
16325.
The RasterInfo Font (freetype.org)
16326.
Show HN: An Amazon Book – “TOP 101 Growth Hacks”. Free for 2 Days. Rating: 4.9 (amazon.com)
16327.
Ask HN: Let the community set a year on titles
16328.
Frequently Asked Watch Questions on Amazon Forum (amazon.com)
16329.
A Neural Algorithm of Artistic Style (arxiv.org)
16330.
iBeacon Business Cards (shkspr.mobi)
16331.
Ask HN: Have the char limits for responses in the YC application been removed?
16332.
Fishing and Ultraviolence (bbc.co.uk)
16333.
The limits of physics (Margaret Wertheim) (aeon.co)
16334.
Lexus and Lasercut Works craft a hand-assembled drivable cardboard car (designboom.com)
16335.
ZigBee IoT Recap BH2015 Security Holes [pdf] (blackhat.com)
16336.
Moov: Wearable Fitness Coach – Looks Like an Interesting Fitbit Competitor (welcome.moov.cc)
16337.
The Building That's in Two Countries at Once (npr.org)
16338.
Drone firm threatened with $2m fine (bbc.com)
16339.
Why Companies Won’t Learn from the T-Mobile/Experian Hack (newyorker.com)
16340.
PoC || GTFO Episode 9 [pdf] (ewams.net)
16341.
Microsoft's Lumia 950 XL looks deceivingly like a flagship Android phone (networkworld.com)
16342.
Wind now competes with fossil fuels, and solar almost does (fortune.com)
16343.
Verizon will share your browsing habits with AOL's massive ad network (theverge.com)
16344.
The white man in that photo (griotmag.com)
16345.
Ask HN: Any recommendations for selling hardware in developing markets?
16346.
Keep your memories safe with WhatsApp and Google Drive (android-developers.blogspot.com)
16347.
Testimony on U.S. Nutrition Guidelines Reflects a Complex Debate (nytimes.com)
16348.
Silicon Valley Internships
16349.
Journalist linked to Anonymous found guilty of 3 federal counts of hacking (arstechnica.com)
16350.
Mozilla Blog: Block slow, privacy-invading content, not "advertising" (blog.mozilla.org)