August 2014 Archive
6271.
Gmail Shortcuts, Tips, and Tricks: Latest Secrets for Hacking Your Email (wordstream.com)
6272.
Google is building trans-pacific Internet cable (thenextweb.com)
6273.
The Ultimate List of UX Design and Development Resources (codefellows.org)
6274.
Women in Data Science – Positive Imagery for the Win (ninazumel.com)
6275.
What happened to the cuddle mattress? (npr.org)
6276.
Jobs endangered by technology (finance.yahoo.com)
6277.
Setting Up Sublime Text 3 for Full Stack Python Development (realpython.com)
6278.
Twitter Paid $134M for Data Partner Gnip (blogs.wsj.com)
6279.
California to require “kill switches” on all smartphones (arstechnica.com)
6280.
Bare metal AVR tinkering (github.com)
6281.
Telegram vs. WhatsApp: A Comprehensive Messenger Comparison (alexeinunez.com)
6282.
Secrets Management and Chef (coderanger.net)
6283.
How to hack a Macbook using just a USB (techly.com.au)
6284.
Brief Transactional Memory GCC tutorial (2012) (pmarlier.free.fr)
6285.
For A More Ordered Life, Organize Like A Chef (npr.org)
6286.
Here’s Why Stealing Cars Went Out of Fashion (nytimes.com)
6287.
Good JS library for email (PM) and task management? ()
6288.
Show HN: Compare two DOM strings and find minimum difference between the two (engineering.wingify.com)
6289.
Five quick tips for startups and entrepreneurs (srknet.co.uk)
6290.
News crew robbed while reporting on “sketchy” neighborhood app (cbsnews.com)
6291.
The Greatest Escape of World War II Was Japanese (medium.com)
6292.
Mark andreessen at Stanford business school (Video 55 minutes) (avc.com)
6293.
Custom form design done through CSS (codepen.io)
6294.
Panamax: Docker Management for Humans (panamax.io)
6295.
You too have permission to make things better (youtube.com)
6296.
Balaji Prabhakar: “Doesn’t Anybody Care About This Traffic?” (gsb.stanford.edu)
6297.
MySQL Scalability LinkedIn Community: 6424 Members in 15 Months (scalebase.com)
6298.
Fox News vs. NY Times: Sentiment Analysis (blog.zillabyte.com)
6299.
GNU Typist 2.9.5 (lists.gnu.org)
6300.
Publishers Turn to the Crowd to Find the Next Best Seller (nytimes.com)