March 2013 Archive
151.
HIV-Infected Infant Cured With Early Use of AIDS Drugs (bloomberg.com)
152.
LinkedIn is a Virus (a.wholelottanothing.org)
153.
The language of Vim (stackoverflow.com)
154.
Uncovering an advertising fraud scheme (NSFW) (2011) (behind-the-enemy-lines.com)
155.
What I Learned from a Sex-Crazed Short-Order Cook (linkedin.com)
156.
Supreme Court sides with student in case over textbooks (salon.com)
157.
Global Internet slows after 'biggest attack in history' (bbc.co.uk)
158.
Lousy web design trends that are making a comeback due to HTML5 (econsultancy.com)
159.
What Major World Cities Look Like at Night, Minus the Light Pollution (blogs.smithsonianmag.com)
160.
Two Months of Soylent (robrhinehart.com)
161.
The hypocrisy in Silicon Valley's big talk on innovation (sfgate.com)
162.
Free works (marco.org)
163.
So You Want To Be A Breaker, Part 1: Web Security (daeken.com)
164.
The Ivy League Was Another Planet (nytimes.com)
165.
9th Circuit Appeals Court: 4th Amendment Applies At The Border (techdirt.com)
166.
Flat UI DMCA Takedown (github.com)
167.
Thank you HN, sorry HN
168.
The Pirate Bay is now hosted in North Korea (thepiratebay.se)
169.
Show HN: An anonymous P2P social network for Android, written in Clojure (nightweb.net)
170.
Google killed me (amywilentz.tumblr.com)
171.
Superhero.js: articles and videos on building large JavaScript apps (superherojs.com)
172.
Today's Email Incident (github.com)
173.
Salary Negotiations: What is Possible When There's no More Money (articulateventures.com)
174.
Introduction to Go 1.1 (go.googlecode.com)
175.
Google: Do what you want with Reader, but don't kill CalDAV (zdnet.com)
176.
Show HN: QR Codify, The Most Useful Snippet I've Ever Written (zacharyvoase.com)
177.
Box's 65-Year-Old Android Engineer Gives Your Startup Some Unsentimental Advice (fastcolabs.com)
178.
Stripe launches beta in the UK (techcrunch.com)
179.
Researcher sets up illegal 420,000 node botnet for IPv4 Internet map (theregister.co.uk)
180.
Google backslides on federated instant messaging, on purpose? (fsf.org)