April 2013 Archive
3031.
For Car Renters, Signing on the Electronic Tablet May Mean Trouble (mobile.nytimes.com)
3032.
WhatsDownToday.com is a scam (blog.embed.ly)
3033.
Why are we so bad at predicting startup success? (andrewchen.co)
3034.
Exploring the Lower Depths of Terseness (prog21.dadgum.com)
3035.
Effects Of Raising And Lowering Speed limits (ibiblio.org)
3036.
Vudu offices burglarized and customer info stolen (engadget.com)
3037.
Rockmelt Will Shut Down Social Browser (techcrunch.com)
3038.
Winklevoss twins claim to own 1 percent of all Bitcoin (theverge.com)
3039.
Stencils for Science (kickstarter.com)
3040.
Will Google's Ray Kurzweil Live Forever? (online.wsj.com)
3041.
More Python 3.3 downloads than Python 2.7 for past 3 months (ianozsvald.com)
3042.
How an accountant created an entire RPG inside an Excel spreadsheet (arstechnica.com)
3043.
Testing Tuesday #1: Tests make software (blog.codeship.io)
3044.
Sriracha hot sauce purveyor turns up the heat (articles.latimes.com)
3045.
_why's print spool client (OCaml) (github.com)
3046.
One Boston Marathon suspect killed; second suspect on loose (usnews.nbcnews.com)
3047.
Ubuntu Touch betas are ready for testing (zdnet.com)
3048.
Ask HN: Anyone use Dart JS on a production app? ()
3049.
The Great Compositions of Photographer Alfred Eisenstaedt (petapixel.com)
3050.
The First Ever Synthetic Biology Kickstarter Is About Growing ‘Glowing Plants’ (techcrunch.com)
3051.
What’s New in Node.js and libuv this Week (blog.strongloop.com)
3052.
Let Me Tell You A Story (clayallsopp.com)
3053.
Be Alone (ninjasandrobots.com)
3054.
Introducing New, More Engaging Advertising Formats (yodel.yahoo.com)
3055.
Google Nose: April fools' day prank (google.com)
3056.
Understanding App Store Pricing — Part 1 (jury.me)
3057.
Aereo wins major court battle against TV networks (theverge.com)
3058.
Store your physical objects in the cloud with Parse IRL (blog.parse.com)
3059.
Fox News' misleading infographics (simplystatistics.org)
3060.
Prenda lawyers take Fifth Amendment; judge storms out: “We’re done” (arstechnica.com)