May 2013 Archive
931.
Inside Pixar's Leadership (scottberkun.com)
932.
Why do professional photographers charge so much? (modelmayhem.com)
933.
Xbox One Revealed (news.xbox.com)
934.
Holder OK'd search warrant for Fox News reporter's private emails, official says (openchannel.nbcnews.com)
935.
Our Recurring Payment Pricing Was Rejected (jerviswhitley.com)
936.
A Better Way to Manage the Rails Secret Token (daniel.fone.net.nz)
937.
ARKYD: A Space Telescope for Everyone (kickstarter.com)
938.
Contact Yahoo (1998) (docs.yahoo.com)
939.
Linux Mint 15 Most Ambitious Release Ever (ostatic.com)
940.
Landsat 8 Data Now Available (landsat.usgs.gov)
941.
New Dyno Networking Model (blog.heroku.com)
942.
Coursera to offer students free online textbooks, with conditions (washingtonpost.com)
943.
Free Science Books (webcache.googleusercontent.com)
944.
What professional philosophers believe – Survey results (philpapers.org)
945.
Why are clients shocked by the price for web development?
946.
Students are the victims and culprits of India’s broken higher education system (qz.com)
947.
Obama to Name Tom Wheeler, a Former Lobbyist, to Head FCC (online.wsj.com)
948.
Nintendo NES console in CSS (codepen.io)
949.
UNICEF: Give Money, Not Facebook Likes (theatlantic.com)
950.
Google ToS rated: “keeps your searches and logs for an undefined period of time” (tosdr.org)
951.
San Francisco's Real Startup Secret Sauce (inc.com)
952.
Dynamo Systems Work Too Hard (damienkatz.net)
953.
Google Finds NUMA Up to 20% Slower for Gmail and Websearch (highscalability.com)
954.
Show HN: My latest work for the Google I/O '13 Keynote (albertomoss.com)
955.
I don’t understand American healthcare – doesn’t mean I shouldn’t provide it (pandodaily.com)
956.
Doctoral degrees: The disposable academic (2010) (economist.com)
957.
HN front page, 16000 visitors in a day, how many actually read the article? (quantisan.com)
958.
Poll: How much money have stock options brought you?
959.
Oslo is turning garbage into energy and is running out of garbage (nytimes.com)
960.
U.S. Software developer wages fall 2% as workforce expands (computerworld.com)