September 2013 Archive
331.
You are committing a crime right now (2012) (blog.erratasec.com)
332.
Barrett Brown Can't Talk About Why the Government Wants to Jail Him (fair.org)
333.
Crowdfunding for Typed Clojure and ClojureScript (indiegogo.com)
334.
Anonymous Pro – a fixed-width font designed for coders (marksimonson.com)
335.
Groupon India sells Onion. Traffic crashes site. (america.aljazeera.com)
336.
We Like You So Much and Want to Know You Better (nytimes.com)
337.
The Boy Genius of Ulan Bator (nytimes.com)
338.
GNU 30th anniversary (gnu.org)
339.
16 Major Firms May Have Received Early Data From Thomson Reuters (rollingstone.com)
340.
Show HN: goworker – a faster, Resque-compatible background worker (goworker.org)
341.
A Rally Against Mass Surveillance in Washington, DC (rally.stopwatching.us)
342.
If You're Programming a Cell Phone Like a Server, You're Doing it Wrong (highscalability.com)
343.
Newly Declassified Documents Show How the Surveillance State was Born (newrepublic.com)
344.
World record solar cell with 44.7% efficiency (phys.org)
345.
The feds pay for 60 percent of Tor’s development. Can users trust it? (washingtonpost.com)
346.
Linode SSD Beta (forum.linode.com)
347.
What's the Most Concave State in the U.S.? Using R to Solve a Geography Puzzle (news.rapgenius.com)
348.
How to crack my software and add a back door (blog.strategiccyber.com)
349.
ODesk vs Elance vs Freelancer vs Guru (blog.assembla.com)
350.
Why we moved away from AWS (blippex.github.io)
351.
John Gilmore: NSA obstructed development of IPSEC Crypto in Linux Kernel (linux.slashdot.org)
352.
Elon Musk's Hyperloop is viable, says maker of simulation software (businessweek.com)
353.
An Engineer's View of Venture Capitalists (2001) (ycombinator.com)
354.
Frederik Pohl has died (frederikpohl.com)
355.
Things You Should Never Do, Part I (2000) (joelonsoftware.com)
356.
Tiny $45 cubic mini-PC runs Android and Linux (linuxgizmos.com)
357.
A most bizarre and mysterious cocoon (whyevolutionistrue.wordpress.com)
358.
Replacing Python (roscidus.com)
359.
The Difference Between Funny and LOL (readtapestry.com)
360.
Deeply Moving: Deep Learning for Sentiment Analysis (nlp.stanford.edu)