March 2016 Archive
12031.
A New Breed of 'Kat (medium.com)
12032.
A solution to [social] anxiety (medium.com)
12033.
Zika virus infects human neural stem cells (medicalxpress.com)
12034.
Why Weebly’s Founders Took Vacation, Even in the Early Years (themacro.com)
12035.
A new breed of kat – meerkat company update (medium.com)
12036.
Free weekend at Code School (codeschool.com)
12037.
Louisiana's fiscal apocalypse (washingtonpost.com)
12038.
It’s Time to Get Rid of Non-Competes in Massachusetts (medium.com)
12039.
Quantum Computer Comes Closer to Cracking RSA Encryption (spectrum.ieee.org)
12040.
[Course] Advanced High Availability on AWS (cloudacademy.com)
12041.
Snapchat Raises $175M from Fidelity at Flat Valuation (wsj.com)
12042.
Milk Music May Shut Down as Samsung Eyes Tidal (variety.com)
12043.
FanDuel suspending paid contests in Texas on 5/1
12044.
Numerai: Introducing Originality (blog.numer.ai)
12045.
BMW plans to make half the R&D staff computer programmers (dailymail.co.uk)
12046.
Thoughts from the Hunted: Broken things about Product Hunt (medium.com)
12047.
Hackaday: Wiring Was Arduino Before Arduino (hackaday.com)
12048.
Why artists shouldn’t be afraid of programmers (ratafire.com)
12049.
Tesla Drives Itself 61 Miles: We're Closer to Autonomous Cars Than You Think (fool.com)
12050.
Families of Choice Are Remaking America (nautil.us)
12051.
Docker snaps up Apache Aurora devs for Swarm team (infoworld.com)
12052.
curl to automate HTTP Jobs (curl.haxx.se)
12053.
Trolling #haskell (gist.github.com)
12054.
Sample code for a Java RESTful back end with a fun subject matter (github.com)
12055.
Docker Makefile to easily build and push container images (gist.github.com)
12056.
India, please design products for our culture (medium.com)
12057.
Antivirus based on community driven (immunet.com)
12058.
Server Snafu Makes Microsoft Beg for CA Audit Data from Its Partners (news.softpedia.com)
12059.
SpaceX's rocket crash lands on a floating drone ship – as expected (theverge.com)
12060.
Australia Turns Its Back on Climate Science (nytimes.com)