August 2014 Archive
841.
Show HN: λ Bubble Pop, an educational toy built using λ Lessons (chrisuehlinger.com)
842.
A bit more about American fuzzy lop (lcamtuf.blogspot.com)
843.
Learning from Kaggle masters (blog.kaggle.com)
844.
QuickCheck by example: Number theory and Okasaki's red-black trees (matt.might.net)
845.
The White House vows to let programmers dress informally (washingtonpost.com)
846.
Show HN: Dumbphone – Turn your smartphone into a dumbphone (play.google.com)
847.
The Lawyer’s Apprentice: How to Learn the Law Without Law School (nytimes.com)
848.
“They Have No Use for Someone Who Looks and Dresses Like Me” (linkedin.com)
849.
Backtracker: Radar sixth sense for cyclists (dragoninnovation.com)
850.
Building a Graphics Card For the Internet: A tour of the newest Imgix datacenter (imgix.exposure.co)
851.
The Secret World of Fast Fashion (psmag.com)
852.
US to Stop Using Soyuz Spacecraft, Invest in Domestic Private Space Industry (space-travel.com)
853.
How We Work on Queries at GitHub (samlambert.com)
854.
Minecraft vanilla 4KB HDD, with read/write heads (imgur.com)
855.
First Images of a Heart Injected with Liquid Metal (medium.com)
856.
Iris: Decentralized Cloud Messaging (iris.karalabe.com)
857.
You can't hide from yourself (danieltenner.com)
858.
Half a Decade After Demo Day (blog.billclerico.com)
859.
BuzzFeed Raises $50M from Andreessen Horowitz (nytimes.com)
860.
Ask HN: Would a .Net back-end put off potential acquisitors?
861.
Dark net drug markets kept alive by great customer service (wired.co.uk)
862.
Death of the taxi medallion: SF cab company ponders major change (sfexaminer.com)
863.
The Tech Behind Dropbox’s New User Experience on Mobile, Part 2 (tech.dropbox.com)
864.
Open Brain Computing Interface (openbci.com)
865.
Amateur Radio Universal Text Messaging/Contact Initiative (aprs.org)
866.
Machine learning isn't Kaggle competitions (jvns.ca)
867.
Show HN: GoLearn (github.com)
868.
DataRobot raises $21M Series A (blogs.wsj.com)
869.
Hearing Music in Noise, Martin Hairer Wins the Fields Medal (simonsfoundation.org)
870.
Dropbox Pro – 1 TB for $99/year (dropbox.com)