January 2016 Archive
8101.
How Headspace Onboards New Users (useronboard.com)
8102.
Verifiable random choice (contest winner) algorithm
8103.
Aptitude, apt-get, and apt Commands (debian-handbook.info)
8104.
China's Stock Market Isn't the Problem (qz.com)
8105.
Another Chinese Billionaire has gone missing (businessinsider.com)
8106.
Huge currency zones don’t work – we need one per city (aeon.co)
8107.
New White Hat Hacking Book of Examples (leanpub.com)
8108.
The Bells Toll for Hillary (spectator.org)
8109.
Best npm package ever (npmjs.com)
8110.
Where Are Amazon's Data Centers? (theatlantic.com)
8111.
U.S. meets tech leaders, forms task force to fight online militants (reuters.com)
8112.
Unions may no longer be able to forcibly raid their members' pockets (theatlantic.com)
8113.
Android Platform Tools drop support for 32-bit Linux without notice (code.google.com)
8114.
Ask HN: Let's learn JavaScript together
8115.
Four young engineers bring free Wi-Fi in Indian villages (mashable.com)
8116.
The time is ripe for another F'ed Company.com
8117.
Show HN: PHP application monitoring down to the code level (ruxit.com)
8118.
state of the art research on 'boredom' (nature.com)
8119.
Pingdom reducing features on their free plans to convince customers to pay (pingdom.com)
8120.
Amazing css styleguide for big applications. Much polemic, though (github.com)
8121.
Ask HN: What's the best welcome you've ever had when you first started your job?
8122.
Scientists found an unexpected factor that could be driving Greenland’s ice loss (washingtonpost.com)
8123.
ORM for Node.js (bookshelfjs.org)
8124.
Gressing (techblog.workiva.com)
8125.
Ask HN: YC Fellowship, was it succesful? Will it be repeated?
8126.
Ask HN: How do you deal with an ex-employer who is not writing a reference ltr?
8127.
The richer the 1% get, the more miserable you get (finance.yahoo.com)
8128.
3 great takeaways from Flow by Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi (fourminutebooks.com)
8129.
Burkina Faso’s maps haven't been updated in 50 years until now (medium.com)
8130.
The FTC's PrivacyCon Is *Today* in DC (free to Public and Webcasted)