July 2013 Archive
1621.
How Technology Is Destroying Jobs (technologyreview.com)
1622.
Elysium’s Director Thinks His Hellish Paradise Is Our Future (wired.com)
1623.
Show HN: Introducing Q.js, a library for modern web apps (github.com)
1624.
Ask HN: I can't think straight, my life is in limbo, and I want to end it now
1625.
McDonalds’ suggested budget for employees shows how impossible it is to get by (deathandtaxesmag.com)
1626.
Parts installed “upside down” caused Russian rocket to explode last week (arstechnica.com)
1627.
What to do when someone steals your startup idea - case study (blog.pipedrive.com)
1628.
A list of queueing libraries (queues.io)
1629.
Lessons from Dropbox - One Million Files Saved Every 15 minutes (2011) (highscalability.com)
1630.
Candy – a JavaScript-based multi-user XMPP chat client (candy-chat.github.io)
1631.
Drupal on Docker (robknight.org.uk)
1632.
The Kopp-Etchells effect (nautil.us)
1633.
Albert Einstein’s Advice to His Son (brainpickings.org)
1634.
Control your status page with Hubot (blog.statuspage.io)
1635.
Julython 2013 (julython.org)
1636.
Verbal abuse on LKML (plus.google.com)
1637.
Spotify responds to Thom Yorke and Nigel Godrich criticism (musicweek.com)
1638.
Kanban – The Secret Engineer Killer (blog.aha.io)
1639.
A search engine built by the crowd (blog.archify.com)
1640.
Converting to Powerline on one machine can be a help to your whole house (a1.blogspot.com)
1641.
Quantopian wants to Turn Stock Trading Algorithmic (forbes.com)
1642.
Growth Hacking Notes (tedna.sh)
1643.
"Why do all of your websites look the same?" (acesubido.com)
1644.
Which Universities Produce the Most Successful Startup Founders? (minimaxir.com)
1645.
With Plug, Create A Personal, Subscription-Free Dropbox With Your USB Drives (techcrunch.com)
1646.
I Quit. (bensw.com)
1647.
Record your terminal and share the recordings (ascii.io)
1648.
Becoming a Freelancer Again (sparklewise.com)
1649.
Résumé Shows Snowden Honed Hacking Skills (nytimes.com)
1650.
Facebook Tackles (Really) Big Data With ‘Project Prism’ (2012) (wired.com)