August 2014 Archive
271.
Choose Firefox Now, Or Later You Won't Get A Choice (robert.ocallahan.org)
272.
RISC creator is pushing open source chips (gigaom.com)
273.
Project Gitenberg (gitenberg.github.io)
274.
Unschooling: The Case for Setting Your Kids Into the Wild (outsideonline.com)
275.
Dylan: the harsh realities of the market (logicaltypes.blogspot.com)
276.
Vision-Correcting Displays [video] (youtube.com)
277.
GCC and LLVM collaboration (lists.cs.uiuc.edu)
278.
An Iron Curtain Has Descended Upon Psychopharmacology (slatestarcodex.com)
279.
Hacker Redirects Traffic From 19 Internet Providers to Steal Bitcoins (wired.com)
280.
Look at the humongous type that Hindley-Milner infers for this tiny program (spacemanaki.com)
281.
CloudFlare Now Supports WebSockets (blog.cloudflare.com)
282.
How Microsoft dragged its development practices into the 21st century (arstechnica.com)
283.
YC Hacks Winner: Athelas – Blood imaging and analysis from your smartphone (ychacks.challengepost.com)
284.
Cell Phone Guide For US Protesters, Updated 2014 Edition (eff.org)
285.
Google Web Fundamentals: Monetization (developers.google.com)
286.
Tesla's Infinite Mile Warranty (teslamotors.com)
287.
6.0 Northern California earthquake (earthquake.usgs.gov)
288.
IBM Chip Processes Data Similar to the Way Your Brain Does (technologyreview.com)
289.
Hal Finney: Bitcoin and me (2013) (bitcointalk.org)
290.
Show HN: Duo – a next-generation package manager for the front end (duojs.org)
291.
Almost perfect: the rise and fall of WordPerfect Corporation (1993) (wordplace.com)
292.
Fast and easy Levenshtein distance using a trie (2011) (stevehanov.ca)
293.
Why Some Schools Are Selling All Their iPads (theatlantic.com)
294.
The Technology Behind Hyperlapse from Instagram (instagram-engineering.tumblr.com)
295.
Psychedelics in problem-solving experiment (en.wikipedia.org)
296.
Macintel: The End Is Nigh (mondaynote.com)
297.
Cider Project: Run iOS apps on Android (engineering.columbia.edu)
298.
Poll: What is your #1 productivity killer?
299.
When It's Bad to Have Good Choices (newyorker.com)
300.
The Guide to Not Buying a 3D Printer (chopmeister.blogspot.com)