March 2012 Archive
12721.
Getting Older (daslee.org)
12722.
Could 3d Printing Eclipse Manufacturing? (news.cnet.com)
12723.
Gimp 2.8: So Close, Yet So Far, Yet So Close (thepowerbase.com)
12724.
The Dispossessed (theamericanscholar.org)
12725.
Top 5 irritating UX trends (just a bit of fun) (blog.ssims.co.uk)
12726.
The QWERTY effect (languagelog.ldc.upenn.edu)
12727.
95% of AT&T’s IP Relay revenue from fraudulent abuse (economist.com)
12728.
Pesticides linked to honeybee decline (guardian.co.uk)
12729.
Testing with Selenium Webdriver, Visual Studio and Nunit (iainhunter.wordpress.com)
12730.
The Offensive Honeypot (groups.google.com)
12731.
Hakin9 Magazine Exploiting Software: Security Onion (felipemartins.info)
12732.
Stop Blaming Everything On Karma (culturalblend.com)
12733.
Three ways you can draw circles (schmantics.blogspot.in)
12734.
Robot bonobo teaches chimps to talk, drive robots, fire water cannon (itworld.com)
12735.
Enyo JS Community Gallery (enyojs.com)
12736.
No wantrepreneurs were hurt in the making of this company. (vc-tees.myshopify.com)
12737.
Apple hit by China Foxconn factory report (bbc.com)
12738.
Has the Art World Finally Fallen for Video Games? (eurogamer.net)
12739.
A Very British Google (kernelmag.com)
12740.
When It Comes To Media Devices, Being First Never Means Being Best (techcrunch.com)
12741.
HBO GO Interactive Features Coming to the iPad for Game of Thrones Premiere (techofthehub.com)
12742.
Technology overview of the GovUK open source platform (radar.oreilly.com)
12743.
Contest: Automated scoring algorithm for student-written essays (techcrunch.com)
12744.
Facebook privacy protection law shot down by Congress (v3.co.uk)
12745.
Keeping the Internet Competitive (nationalaffairs.com)
12746.
3 Quick Tips for Writing Tests in Node.JS (after some rambling) (niallohiggins.com)
12747.
Google Analytics gets a home page redesign. (google.com)
12748.
What Ion Propulsion Means for Boeing—And Our Future in Space (popularmechanics.com)
12749.
Computer correctly identifies liars more than 80 percent of the time (buffalo.edu)
12750.
Texas man sues Path, claims it stole more than just his contacts (venturebeat.com)