February 2013 Archive
9691.
Facebook.com's IPv6 contains face:booc ()
9692.
129 days in prison: Developer speaks out about his detainment in Greece (polygon.com)
9693.
Speaking German in Texas (globalpost.com)
9694.
Soundwagon, the world's smallest vinyl record player (soundwagon.jp)
9695.
Teen Creates 3D Printed, Brain-Powered Prosthetic Arm (blog.makezine.com)
9696.
Leap Motion test with 3D physics engine (vimeo.com)
9697.
Introducing the One-Person Business Empire: An Option VCs want you to Overlook (futuristspeaker.com)
9698.
Amazon Patents the Milkman (yro.slashdot.org)
9699.
Philosophical Landmines (lesswrong.com)
9700.
Human Blood Contains a Significant Amount of Non-Human RNA (from food) (plosone.org)
9701.
Edwin Mellen Press Suing a Librarian (blogs.princeton.edu)
9702.
Flawless (thechangelog.com)
9703.
37signals' new Basecamp app is built with RubyMotion (twitter.com)
9704.
Five ways I save money on digital goods (dendory.net)
9705.
Bridging the Ann Arbor-Detroit Gap (xconomy.com)
9706.
Pokki Website Design From Bryan Sleiter (forrst.com)
9707.
Show HN: Review the latest commits in a repo with git-ribbon (blog.kablamo.org)
9708.
'Privacy killer' CISPA is coming back, whether you like it or not (zdnet.com)
9709.
Jx9 - An Embeddable Scripting Engine for C/C++ apps (jx9.symisc.net)
9710.
How can I access the deep, dark Web? (straightdope.com)
9711.
What Comes After the Cloud? How About the Fog? (spectrum.ieee.org)
9712.
Advice for Up and Coming Front-End Developers (esbueno.noahstokes.com)
9713.
Performance Analysis of Mobile Push Notification Networks (logintc.com)
9714.
Packets of Death - An Update (blog.krisk.org)
9715.
Apple IPads Neutered for U.S. Government in CACI Mobile Push (bloomberg.com)
9716.
Security firm Bit9 hacked, keys used to sign malware (krebsonsecurity.com)
9717.
Computational Investing - Coursea student demographics (augmentedtrader.wordpress.com)
9718.
ConvertKit (convertkit.com)
9719.
Generating Impact Through Social Media as a Nonprofit (catalystdigitalpartners.com)
9720.
Past issues of Marketing Bits are now online. Free to read. (orangethirty.github.com)