April 2012 Archive
541.
Counting Pullups (jcs.org)
542.
11+ Years of Kickstarter: MySpace widgets, missing vowels, & scrapped designs (kickstarter.com)
543.
Google Engineer Told Others of Data Collection (nytimes.com)
544.
Wind Turbine Makes 1,000 Liters Of Clean Water A Day In The Desert (treehugger.com)
545.
Rent time with founders from Parse, Hipmunk, Sincerely and Reddit through Exec (blog.iamexec.com)
546.
Peter Thiel’s CS183: Startup - Class 2 Notes (blakemasters.tumblr.com)
547.
After Two Startup Accelerators, What I Wish Someone Had Told Me (ecquire.com)
548.
NumPy on PyPy progress report (morepypy.blogspot.com)
549.
The byte order fallacy (commandcenter.blogspot.com)
550.
Open Letter to XSLT Fans (snoyman.com)
551.
Inside Aaron’s Apartment: A Most Amazing Bedroom (haighteration.com)
552.
Olympics 2012: A Bruce Schneier Moment (antipope.org)
553.
A billion thanks to the open source community from Red Hat (opensource.com)
554.
Julia, Python and Cython (groups.google.com)
555.
Physicist Uses Math to Beat Traffic Ticket (physicscentral.com)
556.
The One Product That Makes Apple a Trillion-Dollar Company Overnight (launch.co)
557.
Why Every Ruby Developer Should Learn Smalltalk (victorsavkin.com)
558.
What comes next: π/2, π/2, π/2, π/2, π/2, π/2, π/2, ...? (thebigquestions.com)
559.
Hacker School: Summer 2012 Applications Open + Etsy Scholarships (hackerschool.com)
560.
Peter Thiel’s CS183: Startup - Class 5 Notes Essay (blakemasters.tumblr.com)
561.
Rust's Object System (smallcultfollowing.com)
562.
Secret Computer Code Threatens Science (scientificamerican.com)
563.
Show HN: Help me launch a weekly HN podcast (hnpod.com)
564.
How to apologise to your customers (blogs.balsamiq.com)
565.
SpaceX Given Green Light For First Launch To Space Station (wired.com)
566.
Show HN: Bridge, a cross-language RPC messaging system (flotype.com)
567.
Linux Tycoon is the premier Linux Distro Building Simulator game (lunduke.com)
568.
The Invention of Jaywalking (theatlanticcities.com)
569.
Lua OS - An operating system around Lua, developed by a former Google employee (luaos.net)
570.
Netflix Recommendations: Beyond the 5 stars (techblog.netflix.com)