August 2012 Archive
8941.
Brydge + iPad: Do more (kickstarter.com)
8942.
Facebook hacks the world (techinasia.com)
8943.
SUSE slowly shows UEFI Secure Boot plan (itworld.com)
8944.
Could Extreme Weather Take Down the Internet? (slashdot.org)
8945.
Login security : PHP (reddit.com)
8946.
Leak Finder: a new tool for JavaScript (google-opensource.blogspot.de)
8947.
Hardware Hacks: Raspberry Pi software and developer boards (h-online.com)
8948.
A generic loop unroller based on template meta-programming (cpplove.blogspot.com)
8949.
I Say Movie, You Say Film ... Our Personal Clouds Can Still Work Together (wired.com)
8950.
C++11: Introducing the Move Constructor and the Move Assignment Operator (blog.smartbear.com)
8951.
Improving Futures and Callbacks in C++ To Avoid Synching by Waiting (drdobbs.com)
8952.
Unexpected skip of a destructor (efesx.com)
8953.
Google wants to create the Star Trek Search Engine (googleblog.blogspot.hu)
8954.
500 Startups Looking to Latin America and India for Second Fund (forbes.com)
8955.
July 2012: four Cisco vulnerabilities (ciscozine.com)
8956.
How does Flash Contribute To The Success Of A Website (flashuser.net)
8957.
Google to include Gmail in search results (googleblog.blogspot.in)
8958.
Microsoft opens Office and SharePoint up to web developers (gigaom.com)
8959.
Flight search - Designing for iOS vs the mobile web (blog.cleartrip.com)
8960.
How Google's ContentID System Fails At Fair Use & Public Domain (techdirt.com)
8961.
SendGrid metadata and Rails (henrik.nyh.se)
8962.
Hacked journalist reminds us security is people plus process (zdnet.com)
8963.
The Art Of Staying Up To Date (smashingmagazine.com)
8964.
Help Us Help WordPress (wp.smashingmagazine.com)
8965.
Kickstarter: Ouya raises $1million in 8 hours and 22 minutes (sparknlaunch.wordpress.com)
8966.
Marissa Mayer wants Yahoo to focus on product, not profit (theverge.com)
8967.
Cherry MX mechanical keyboard switches compared, with audio (techreport.com)
8968.
Pulse, the mobile news reading app, makes its way to web (blog.pulse.me)
8969.
Gauss: Nation-state cyber-surveillance meets banking Trojan (securelist.com)
8970.
After Stuxnet, Flame and Duqu : Gauss the most recent cyber-weapon (securelist.com)