February 2013 Archive
211.
The Play Framework at LinkedIn (engineering.linkedin.com)
212.
The Promise of Firefox OS (sergimansilla.com)
213.
You cannot have a digital copy of the DC Code (macwright.org)
214.
Incredible Secret Money Machine (kk.org)
215.
Email transparency (stripe.com)
216.
Ask HN: A patent troll is targeting my transit app
217.
MIT can honor Aaron Swartz by fighting to make journals open to everyone (slate.com)
218.
Simple user styles for popular websites (connors.github.com)
219.
Asm.js: a strict subset of js for compilers – working draft (asmjs.org)
220.
Announcing Xamarin 2.0 (blog.xamarin.com)
221.
Increasing Public Access to the Results of Scientific Research (petitions.whitehouse.gov)
222.
Evasi0n iOS 6.x jailbreak (evasi0n.com)
223.
Host webpages on Google Drive (googledrive.com)
224.
Star Wars Traceroute - How I did it (beaglenetworks.net)
225.
Halo Creator Unveils Its Next Masterpiece, a Persistent Online World (wired.com)
226.
In 2005 Motorola Tried to Sue Me For Unlocking Phones (sina.is)
227.
Mobile Operators Announce Commitment to Firefox OS (blog.mozilla.org)
228.
Why there is no Hitchhiker’s Guide to Mathematics for Programmers (jeremykun.com)
229.
HipChat releases native app for Mac (hipchat.com)
230.
Name.com hijacks non-existent subdomains and redirects to their servers (destructuring.net)
231.
Balancing text for better readability (blogs.adobe.com)
232.
AWS OpsWorks - Flexible Application Management in the Cloud Using Chef (aws.typepad.com)
233.
Show HN: What colour is your IP address? (prettyip.meetstrange.com)
234.
Show HN: Build your own Heroku on your own servers (cloud66.com)
235.
180TB of Good Vibrations – Storage Pod 3.0 (blog.backblaze.com)
236.
Mojang's Monster Profits (it24.idg.se)
237.
Dropzone.js - JS library for drag-and-drop file uploads with image previews (dropzonejs.com)
238.
Bootstrapping a Software Product (speakerdeck.com)
239.
At Facebook, zero-day exploits, backdoor code bring war games drill to life (arstechnica.com)
240.
Torvalds clarifies Linux's Windows 8 Secure Boot position (zdnet.com)