November 2014 Archive
6991.
Uber Has Been Blocked in Nevada (inc.com)
6992.
Algorithms Can Ruin Lives (slate.com)
6993.
Uber halts service in Nevada after legal setback (venturebeat.com)
6994.
Snakes on a Keyboard (spritesmods.com)
6995.
Messy desks correlated with creativity (mic.com)
6996.
The Potential of Blockchain Technology (youtube.com)
6997.
The Amazing Lisp Vim (devblog.arnebrasseur.net)
6998.
Warning: Browser Auth Pishing Attack with Embedded Images (bfldev.com)
6999.
The last unmapped places on Earth (bbc.com)
7000.
Vue.js Hacker News Clone (yyx990803.github.io)
7001.
Show HN: A CSS font-feature-settings tester (thisarmy.github.com)
7002.
Ask HN: What's your thought on data-sharing? ()
7003.
Clever hack lets CarPlay run on an iPhone 6 (cultofmac.com)
7004.
MIT's Football Team Is 10-0 and Finding Success in the NCAA Division 3 Playoffs (nytimes.com)
7005.
YouTube has redirect loop on one user (youtube.com)
7006.
Packed Pixels – An extra monitor for your laptop (kickstarter.com)
7007.
The best thing you can do for your career (sleeping) (forumblog.org)
7008.
The Way to a New Project -– Becoming Effective (techie-notebook.blogspot.com)
7009.
Mars Robots (rojo2.com)
7010.
Hackercafe: working with opportunity teams (kickstarter.com)
7011.
Black Friday traffic brings down Web stores of HP, Best Buy, others (arstechnica.com)
7012.
A letter to our Indian users – OnePlus Blog (oneplus.net)
7013.
Tabletop experiment could detect gravitational waves (phys.org)
7014.
“I couldn't really learn Erlang, 'cos it didn't exist, so I invented it” (2013) (erlang.org)
7015.
Create your first connected light in 15 minutes with your Arduino Ethernet (lelylan.github.io)
7016.
The Shen language will relicense under BSD if its £8500 fundraising goal is met (shenlanguage.org)
7017.
OPEC Policy Ensures U.S. Shale Crash, Russian Tycoon Says (bloomberg.com)
7018.
Evidence of Polyethylene Biodegradation by Plastic-Eating Waxworms (pubs.acs.org)
7019.
Light-weight Python Templating Engine (github.com)
7020.
Ancient Sea Mystery: 'World's first computer' more complex than thought (foxnews.com)