June 2012 Archive
2461.
A 25 line Python keylogger for OS X (gist.github.com)
2462.
In Ad Network Nightmare, Microsoft Making ‘Do Not Track’ Default for IE 10 (wired.com)
2463.
Hipster Branding (hipsterbranding.tumblr.com)
2464.
Salt, we misjudged you (nytimes.com)
2465.
Netflix Open Connect Content Delivery Network (signup.netflix.com)
2466.
Anything But Engineering (blog.derrickko.com)
2467.
FBI Did Not Steal Megaupload Evidence Because It’s “Digital”? (torrentfreak.com)
2468.
10 Timeframes (contentsmagazine.com)
2469.
thoughtbot opening an office in San Francisco (robots.thoughtbot.com)
2470.
Click and Clack of Car Talk Retiring from Broadcasting (m.npr.org)
2471.
Nurturing a baby and a start-up business (nytimes.com)
2472.
Beginning Perl (Wrox) - Read Perl book online for free (ofps.oreilly.com)
2473.
Why I had it all wrong about Boston's high-tech scene (news.cnet.com)
2474.
New Zeland High Court wants to see evidence against dotcom. US doesn't have any. (techdirt.com)
2475.
It's Called Progress, Folks (garre.tt)
2476.
The Pulley Paradox (howtospotapsychopath.com)
2477.
Higgs Boson Found? (wired.com)
2478.
Using Heroku buildpacks with Stackato (Cloud Foundry-based PaaS software) (activestate.com)
2479.
Tumblr. "Full Disclosure" or Why I Hate Reporting (homakov.blogspot.com)
2480.
Client-Side vs Server-Side Rendering (openmymind.net)
2481.
Antibiotic-Free Meat Business Is Booming, Thanks To Chipotle (npr.org)
2482.
If Filesharing is Theft, Then iTunes is Extortion (falkvinge.net)
2483.
The Other Side of the Story (whoshere.zendesk.com)
2484.
Understanding '*', '*args', '**' and '**kwargs' in Python (agiliq.com)
2485.
Why I crave mistakes (joel.is)
2486.
Dark chocolate could prevent heart problems in high-risk people (sciencedaily.com)
2487.
“Flame” malware was signed by rogue Microsoft certificate (arstechnica.com)
2488.
Why Microsoft is (finally) winning the war for the living room (forbes.com)
2489.
Mystery of Big Data’s Parallel Universe Brings Fear, and a Thrill (nytimes.com)
2490.
How “Computer Geeks” replaced “Computer Girls” (gender.stanford.edu)