November 2012 Archive
1441.
CSSHat with 60% Discount Today (csshat.com)
1442.
HTML Datepicker (jsfiddle.net)
1443.
OpenHack: 17 cities strong and counting (openhack.github.com)
1444.
The Big Donors (cnn.com)
1445.
An Outcast Among Peers Gains Traction on Alzheimer's Cure (online.wsj.com)
1446.
Stream of crawled sites from the Internet Archive (somewhat NSFW) (crawl432.us.archive.org)
1447.
Measuring the shared RAM usage of a process (tech.brightbox.com)
1448.
On “Hacking” Y Combinator Interviews and Successful Startups (tyler.menez.es)
1449.
How NASA might build its very first warp drive (io9.com)
1450.
Be thankful for turkey cooking patents (boingboing.net)
1451.
Brainfuck JIT (blog.dubbelboer.com)
1452.
Mesh Network Connects Sandy Survivors Still Without Power (techpresident.com)
1453.
Somehow, an Incredible Robotic Dragonfly is Now on Indiegogo (spectrum.ieee.org)
1454.
Tell Congress: Don’t Let Our Right To Privacy Expire (vanishingrights.com)
1455.
Hacking FEMA (blog.boxysean.com)
1456.
Grid Layouts in Modern Web Design (richardwalshlabs.blogspot.com)
1457.
Obama Issues Another Secret Memo in Fight Against Insiders (novainfosec.com)
1458.
San Francisco Approves 220-Square-Foot ‘Micro-Apartments’ (wired.com)
1459.
World's First Kitchen-Free, Robot-Run Fast-Food Restaurant (foodbeast.com)
1460.
The Browser You Loved to Hate (browseryoulovedtohate.com)
1461.
Airlines Face Acute Shortage of Pilots (online.wsj.com)
1462.
Android is a desolate wasteland when it comes to games (wired.co.uk)
1463.
Your Rate - A better way to calculate your hourly freelance rate (yourrate.co)
1464.
Broken iPhone? Call iCracked (YC W12), the aspiring AAA of smartphones (xconomy.com)
1465.
What Sinofsky’s Departure Suggests about Microsoft (technologyreview.com)
1466.
IOS Programming with Lua (luanova.org)
1467.
Are you on Facebook? Check out MyPermissions (thenextweb.com)
1468.
Why Early Detection Is the Best Way to Beat Cancer (wired.com)
1469.
Introducing New LaunchRock: A Complete Re-Build (blog.launchrock.com)
1470.
Why Linus Torvalds would rather code than make money (techradar.com)