January 2014 Archive
751.
What Every Software Developer Must Know About Unicode (2003) (joelonsoftware.com)
752.
iPad onscreen keyboard designed for LaTeX [video] (texpadapp.com)
753.
Sources: We were pressured to weaken mobile security in the 80's (aftenposten.no)
754.
No more time limits on Spotify (news.spotify.com)
755.
Silicon Valley workers may pursue collusion case as group (reuters.com)
756.
The case for an antibiotics tax (washingtonpost.com)
757.
iOS Static Libraries Are, Like, Really Bad (landonf.bikemonkey.org)
758.
Court to Yelp: Reveal names of negative reviewers (news.cnet.com)
759.
List of languages that compile to JS (github.com)
760.
Machine that Levitates Objects Using Sound [video] (hardware-360.com)
761.
The 2 Biggest Mistakes I Made (Before Reaching $500 MRR) (wisecashhq.com)
762.
The New York Times' Most Popular Story of 2013 Was Not an Article (theatlantic.com)
763.
Pure JS OCR via Emscripten (antimatter15.com)
764.
Consciousness as a State of Matter (arxiv.org)
765.
Technology and Wealth Inequality (blog.samaltman.com)
766.
Fallacies (nizkor.org)
767.
The Problems With Debit And Credit Cards Are Deeper Than We Thought (readwrite.com)
768.
Linux 3.4+: arbitrary write with CONFIG_X86_X32 (CVE-2014-0038) (seclists.org)
769.
Court Rules That Yelp Must Unmask the Identities of Seven Anonymous Reviewers (theatlantic.com)
770.
Functional Programming 101 with Haskell (blog.gja.in)
771.
Google Analytics for GitHub (github.com)
772.
AMD Kaveri Review (anandtech.com)
773.
Improving Dropbox Performance: Retrieving Thumbnails (tech.dropbox.com)
774.
Announcing Guides (github.com)
775.
Bitcoin, litecoin, dogecoin: How to explore the block chain (grantammons.me)
776.
How do you tell managers that having good developers is a privilege? (workplace.stackexchange.com)
777.
Why isn't People-Centric UI Design taking off? (hanselman.com)
778.
“SPDY does not clearly outperform HTTP over cellular networks” [pdf] (conferences.sigcomm.org)
779.
Kvazaar HEVC/H.265 encoder released under GPLv2 (github.com)
780.
BeWifi lets you steal your neighbor’s bandwidth when they’re not using it (arstechnica.com)