March 2013 Archive
361.
Coding Cloud Heroku May Face Lawsuit Over Bait-and-Switch Claims (wired.com)
362.
Checkout github pull requests locally (gist.github.com)
363.
“Paleofantasy”: Stone Age delusions (salon.com)
364.
Rap Genius (YC S11) responds to Heroku’s call for ‘respect’ (venturebeat.com)
365.
Chrome Inspector Detector (adamschwartz.co)
366.
Show HN: My all-nighter project to find the best Google Reader alternative (replacereader.com)
367.
Booth Babes, Street Clothes, and GDC: Thanks But You sort of Made It Worse (blog.katylevinson.com)
368.
Why did United neglect to tell parents of a minor she was rerouted? (publikdemand.com)
369.
New kernel.org (kernel.org)
370.
The madness of the bailout in Cyprus (maximise.dk)
371.
Fab stops sending you emails you don’t read, even when you don’t ask them to (thenextweb.com)
372.
Canon develops 35 mm full-frame CMOS sensor for video capture (canon.com)
373.
Twitter? It’s Not Fun Anymore (thetwitcleaner.com)
374.
Dropbox Sync API (dropbox.com)
375.
"Optimizations should be added to V8" for the asm.js subset of JavaScript (code.google.com)
376.
Why We Switched From Stripe To Balanced (grouptalent.com)
377.
Show HN: Bateman, a stock trading system I'm working on (github.com)
378.
Everything about Java 8 (techempower.com)
379.
Teaching Square Roots to a Five Year Old (dlewis.net)
380.
Nasty Gal, an Online Start-Up, Is a Fast-Growing Retailer (nytimes.com)
381.
The Cost Of Free Doughnuts: 70 Years Of Regret (npr.org)
382.
Super Mario World "Completed" in Under 3 Minutes by Corrupting the RAM (minimaxir.com)
383.
Dirt may explain why richest countries suffer diseases rarely seen anywhere else (smithsonianmag.com)
384.
How the kids stole the show: Young Coders tutorial at PyCon (pycon.blogspot.com)
385.
He Has Millions and a New Job at Yahoo. Soon, He’ll Be 18 (nytimes.com)
386.
Sick of SEO Scumbags (thehodge.co.uk)
387.
Google Maps: “Treasure Map” mode (maps.google.com)
388.
The DOM isn't slow (blog.korynunn.com)
389.
No, Diatoms Have Not Been Found in a Meteorite (slate.com)
390.
VPN Services That Take Your Anonymity Seriously (torrentfreak.com)