October 2013 Archive
1411.
Show HN: Linux activity recorder (sealion.com)
1412.
Alleged Silk Road drug kingpin denies charges (sfgate.com)
1413.
Runnable Wants To Become The “YouTube Of Code” (techcrunch.com)
1414.
Twitter pays SVP of Engineering $10 million as Silicon Valley tussles for talent (reuters.com)
1415.
Microsoft Mission Impossible (mondaynote.com)
1416.
The press-release conviction of a biotech CEO and its impact on research (articles.washingtonpost.com)
1417.
The Best VPN Is The One You Use (blog.justinsb.com)
1418.
All I want to do is build a web site (about.grow.io)
1419.
Nsa.gov is down (nsa.gov)
1420.
Why getting the Obamacare exchanges to work was difficult (washingtonpost.com)
1421.
Tekpub Has Been Acquired (wekeroad.com)
1422.
Silk Road Update: Federal Prosecutors File Separate Forfeiture Complaint (popehat.com)
1423.
WebRTC Copy – OTR and fast file transfers over WebRTC (rtccopy.com)
1424.
Human brain boiled in its skull lasted 4000 years (newscientist.com)
1425.
So You Want To Be A Writer? That’s Mistake #1 (ryanholiday.net)
1426.
A Functional Introduction to Lua (pragprog.com)
1427.
Conceptual Introduction to Web Development (milanlandaverde.com)
1428.
Signet: Sign your work in the development console (github.hubspot.com)
1429.
Going beyond vulnerability rewards (googleonlinesecurity.blogspot.ca)
1430.
Big Data at Khan Academy (mattfaus.com)
1431.
Show HN: cash flow for freelancers and small businesses [retry] (wisecashhq.com)
1432.
New superconductor is first predicted then created (rsc.org)
1433.
Jewish Nobel Laureates (en.wikipedia.org)
1434.
Ask HN: Should I go to Sweden for work?
1435.
How Bitcoin Could Become a Viable Currency (finance.yahoo.com)
1436.
IE11 on Windows 8.1 - Google Search loads in legacy mode (productforums.google.com)
1437.
Fox News Touchscreens are Microsoft Perceptive Pixel Displays Running Windows 8 (techcrunch.com)
1438.
Stop "Disrupting" Everything (slate.com)
1439.
Intellectual Ventures ramps up lobbying in face of new legislation (usatoday.com)
1440.
Not every U.S. telephone number beginning with 555 is fake (techrepublic.com)