February 2013 Archive
9841.
TimeHub: Generate good-looking invoices from your GitHub repositories. (timehub.me)
9842.
Raspberry Pi + MakeyMakey + Scratch + Fruit & Veg = Awesome (shkspr.mobi)
9843.
Fly or Die: BlackBerry Z10 (techcrunch.com)
9844.
Freelance Marketing 101: Creating a “Magnetic” Freelance Business (bidsketch.com)
9845.
A Vim and ViEmu mapping you really can’t miss - never type :noh again (viemu.com)
9846.
AMD Plans To Stick With The HD 7000 Series For The Bulk of 2013 (maximumpc.com)
9847.
Django-stronghold - Login required middleware (github.com)
9848.
Pirate Bay Documentary on YouTube : "The Pirate Bay Away From Keyboard" (youtube.com)
9849.
SimpleDaemon: A Daemon class for easy forking of a python applications (pypi.python.org)
9850.
For Startups, Culture Shouldn't Be Overlooked (online.wsj.com)
9851.
Ideas for 1Password (alexsmolen.com)
9852.
See how the world is celebrating Chinese New Years (tintup.com)
9853.
Where Apple and Dick Tracy may merge (bits.blogs.nytimes.com)
9854.
Tales from the Cryptography: The Terrifying Math Explained - Part 1 (ericfay.me)
9855.
China air pollution "beyond index" (sullivanjournal.com)
9856.
It's Torturous Chaos Until it isn't (blog.asmartbear.com)
9857.
LobbyPlag: track lobbyists proposals which went straight into EU amendments (lobbyplag.eu)
9858.
SlimSurveys (slimsurveys.com)
9859.
Snowpocolypse 2013 just got real (talknerdytome.net)
9860.
Hey DynLaunch: Why We (PriceIntel) Exist and Why We’re in New England (blog.priceintelligently.com)
9861.
WebSockets, Raspis, and GPIO (hackaday.com)
9862.
Indepth look at XSS (securityblog.howellsonline.ca)
9863.
CISPA is back (cispaisback.com)
9864.
Zerofund: Kickstarting Greece’s startup scene (thenextweb.com)
9865.
The real way to free Wi-Fi (zdnet.com)
9866.
Grid++ CSS Frameworks (browser.ibarelyknowher.com)
9867.
Lego Antikythera Mechanism (wired.com)
9868.
Another shiny object photographed on Mars (mars.jpl.nasa.gov)
9869.
Star Trek IPv6 traceroute. Boldly go where no packet has gone before. (gist.github.com)
9870.
Automate Your Development Environment With Vagrant (codehenge.net)