December 2014 Archive
61.
Marking HTTP as Non-Secure (chromium.org)
62.
The Saddest Thing I Know about the Integers (blogs.scientificamerican.com)
63.
Freelancing: How to talk yourself into charging more (andyadams.org)
64.
Kalzumeus Software Year in Review 2014 (kalzumeus.com)
65.
Why the Sony hack is unlikely to be the work of North Korea (marcrogers.org)
66.
Nashville police chief shares message, responds to questions (tennessean.com)
67.
The World's Dumbest Idea: Maximizing Shareholder Value [pdf] (gmo.com)
68.
Swedish Police Raid the Pirate Bay, Site Offline (torrentfreak.com)
69.
Attack Is Suspected as North Korean Internet Collapses (nytimes.com)
70.
Scans of North Korean IP Space (nknetobserver.github.io)
71.
Announcing Docker Machine, Swarm, and Compose for Orchestrating Distributed Apps (blog.docker.com)
72.
Please don't denigrate what a beginner is currently learning (pgbovine.net)
73.
Google News to shut down in Spain (googlepolicyeurope.blogspot.com)
74.
Peter Sunde: 'I went to jail for my cause. What did you do?' (wired.co.uk)
75.
Technical Papers Every Programmer Should Read at Least Twice (2011) (blog.fogus.me)
76.
Salvatore Sanfilippo, the author of Redis: from Sicily with talent and passion (blog.baia-network.org)
77.
World's Simplest Electric Train [video] (youtube.com)
78.
Uber banned from operating in Indian capital after rape accusation (reuters.com)
79.
Ask HN: How can I remedy scatter brain and information overload?
80.
BPG Image Comparison (xooyoozoo.github.io)
81.
Parable of the Polygons – a playable post on the shape of society (ncase.me)
82.
An Offer to Sony from 2600 (2600.com)
83.
You can take down Pirate Bay, but you can’t kill the Internet it created (washingtonpost.com)
84.
Bad Microsoft (badmicrosoft.com)
85.
My Amazon S3 Mistake (devfactor.net)
86.
Linus Torvalds on semaphores (1999) (yarchive.net)
87.
Ask HN: How or where to begin learning mathematics from first principles?
88.
The Old Pirate Bay (oldpiratebay.org)
89.
The Huge, Unseen Operation Behind the Accuracy of Google Maps (wired.com)
90.
How we made editing Wikipedia twice as fast (blog.wikimedia.org)