December 2014 Archive
6331.
Ars Technica hacked ()
6332.
Ask HN: Which one will bring more beta users? Product Hunt or Betalist? ()
6333.
Uber's Sydney fiasco: the problem with surge pricing is everyone hates it (vox.com)
6334.
Enyo JavaScript Framework 2.5.1 Released with Yeoman and Grunt Support (blog.enyojs.com)
6335.
Write on Peru (Inspired by Greenpeace) (writeonperu.com)
6336.
Are you #GmailDefault? (gmaildefault.com)
6337.
EmberJS is Implementing Server-Side Rendering (github.com)
6338.
Silicon Swag: Custom Startup Gear (siliconswag.com)
6339.
A whisper, then tingles, then 87M YouTube views (washingtonpost.com)
6340.
Seeing I: 28 days living only through Virtual Reality (kickstarter.com)
6341.
Pair Programming with Git: A Workflow for Humans (seetravisblog.com)
6342.
Taking stock: Tech to thwart retail's worst miscreants (bbc.co.uk)
6343.
The Art of Programming (medium.com)
6344.
Personal open source contribution story from a startup (twitter.com)
6345.
Innovators of Intelligence Look to Past (nytimes.com)
6346.
First Thoughts on the New OpenBSD Httpd Webserver (protoc.org)
6347.
Software Development Outsourcing to Belarus (xbsoftware.com)
6348.
Front-end Front (frontendfront.com)
6349.
Show HN: Interactive data pipe manager written in Go (github.com)
6350.
Crawling a Website that loads content using JavaScript with Selenium Webdriver (hackerearth.com)
6351.
Categories Great and Small (bartoszmilewski.com)
6352.
Depression and Entrepreneurship – With Jerry Colonna and Rand Fishkin (reboot.io)
6353.
React-forms Forms library for react (github.com)
6354.
Russia heading for crash as ruble plummets (money.cnn.com)
6355.
How Bitfountain made $1M+ teaching online in 2014 (milliondollarinstructor.com)
6356.
MongoDB acquires WiredTiger (mongodb.com)
6357.
Warning: A computer science degree may be a waste of your time and money (mashable.com)
6358.
Egloo – Candle Powered Heater: Heat Your Room for $0.10/day (indiegogo.com)
6359.
The wonderful and terrifying implications of computers that can learn (TED) (ted.com)
6360.
The Odd Math of Medical Tests: One Scan, Two Prices, Both High (nytimes.com)