February 2012 Archive
1441.
Ambassador sorry after signing ACTA (techdirt.com)
1442.
John Baez will give his Google Talk tomorrow in the form of a robot (johncarlosbaez.wordpress.com)
1443.
Udacity's model (blogs.reuters.com)
1444.
Introducing Simple Tiles: ProPublica's new Mapping Library (propublica.org)
1445.
Customer Lifetime Value techniques: be careful with cohort analysis (blog.custora.com)
1446.
Fast strongly universal hashing algorithms over variable-length strings (code.google.com)
1447.
Should students profit off my classes? (professorbainbridge.com)
1448.
The Future of Peer Review (techcrunch.com)
1449.
Stripe Blog: Track Stripe's uptime (stripe.com)
1450.
Dropbox Can Now Automatically Sync Your Android Photos (techcrunch.com)
1451.
Download the free Messages Beta - iMessage Beta (apple.com)
1452.
Why LightSquared failed: It was science, not politics (arstechnica.com)
1453.
Xenon 2 and DRM, almost irreparable damages? (kingofgng.com)
1454.
Udp/tcp connection using pure bash (tmartiro.blogspot.com)
1455.
Automating Customer Service at a Startup (tomblomfield.com)
1456.
Linux Mint 12 LXDE RC is out and available for download (linuxstall.com)
1457.
Ask PG: I submitted a story now I can't access HN from my home ip address ()
1458.
Re: Did You Hear We Got Osama? (chestergrant.posterous.com)
1459.
Biological computer can decrypt images stored in DNA (extremetech.com)
1460.
Friends of WikiLeaks (Facebook for Revolutionaries) (wlfriends.org)
1461.
Escaping the Cycle of Technical Debt (blog.serverfault.com)
1462.
DotCloud adds FUSE support and shared filesystems (blog.dotcloud.com)
1463.
USCIS: Live Streaming - Fix Immigration Summit (uscis.gov)
1464.
Our Biggest Kickstarter Surprises (mail-pilot.com)
1465.
Wolfram Alpha Pro Launched (wolframalpha.com)
1466.
Introduction to Type-Level Programming in Scala (rudairandamacha.blogspot.com)
1467.
Face recognition with Node.js (nodejs-news.com)
1468.
Hacker Historian George Dyson Sits Down With Wired (wired.com)
1469.
Alan Turing's library list (alexbellos.com)
1470.
Hollywood Wants To Kill Piracy? No Problem: Just Offer Something Better (techdirt.com)