January 2014 Archive
481.
'Revenge porn' website former owner Hunter Moore arrested (bbc.co.uk)
482.
Bitcoin 2.0 explained (voices.yahoo.com)
483.
China cloning on an 'industrial scale' (bbc.co.uk)
484.
Git add -p (johnkary.net)
485.
Show HN: Codebox - Open-source cloud and desktop IDE (github.com)
486.
With Traction But Out Of Cash, 4chan Founder Kills Off Canvas/DrawQuest (techcrunch.com)
487.
Apache Spark: The Next Big Data Thing? (blog.mikiobraun.de)
488.
On Google's Acquisition of Nest (daringfireball.net)
489.
Amazon Wants to Ship Your Package Before You Buy It (blogs.wsj.com)
490.
Ethereum: A Turing-Complete Cryptocurrency (ethereum.org)
491.
The best Postgres feature you're not using – CTEs aka WITH clauses (craigkerstiens.com)
492.
Show HN: An Open-Source Data Science Curriculum (github.com)
493.
K-means Clustering 86 Single Malt Scotch Whiskies (blog.revolutionanalytics.com)
494.
Why Dogecoin is Important (abcoin.net)
495.
Five Paragraph Essays (blog.42floors.com)
496.
Snowden-haters are on the wrong side of history (reprog.wordpress.com)
497.
Stripe adds multiple account support (stripe.com)
498.
Startups that have bootstrapped their way to profitability (beatrixapp.com)
499.
Crash Course on Notation in Programming Language Theory (siek.blogspot.com)
500.
The world’s rich stay rich while the poor struggle to prosper (johnkay.com)
501.
A Worst Case for Functional Programming? (prog21.dadgum.com)
502.
Durr: A shivering unisex bracelet that investigates our perception of 5 minutes (skreksto.re)
503.
You can now create a Bitcoin clone by filling out a simple webform (coingen.io)
504.
Very funny, gdb. Ve-ery funny (yosefk.com)
505.
Jamaican bobsleigh team raises $25k in Dogecoin (theguardian.com)
506.
MIT OpenCourseWare Bookshelf (mitopencourseware.wordpress.com)
507.
Never Going Back - A Week of Not Eating Lunch at My Desk (randomdrake.com)
508.
Tcl the misunderstood (2006) (antirez.com)
509.
How to cope with “idea overflow”? (productivity.stackexchange.com)
510.
An Estonian shares his country's strategy for navigating the digital world (theatlantic.com)