October 2013 Archive
6841.
LokiJS: javascript in-memory/embedded database (lokijs.org)
6842.
Launching the Open Speech Initiative (grasch.net)
6843.
Google X Display Guru Says Wearable Computing Is Unstoppable (technologyreview.com)
6844.
The CIA Didn't Trust Snowden, Even Back in 2009 (nextgov.com)
6845.
TED talks are lying to you (salon.com)
6846.
BitTorrent Inc. Doesn’t Care About Your Privacy, Not Always (torrentfreak.com)
6847.
Bit by Bit, Virtual Reality Heads for the Holodeck (bits.blogs.nytimes.com)
6848.
Ask HN: Does Django work out-of-the-box with GAE and Cloud SQL? ()
6849.
Five years at Cloudera (tom-e-white.com)
6850.
Android-Notifier: Receive Android notifications remotely (code.google.com)
6851.
Show HN: end-to-end browser encryption (example application) (github.com)
6852.
Macros in Python: quasiquotes, case classes, LINQ and more (github.com)
6853.
Elephants Understand Pointing Better Than Chimps (decodedscience.com)
6854.
The GOP's little rule change they hoped you wouldn't notice (youtube.com)
6855.
Leading Economist Predicts A Bitcoin Backlash From Governments (technologyreview.com)
6856.
North Korea 'testing chemical weapons on political prisoners' (telegraph.co.uk)
6857.
Canadian gov't to push cable providers to unbundle channels (reuters.com)
6858.
Privacy Fears Grow as Cities Increase Surveillance (nytimes.com)
6859.
Talos: An Iron Man suit for U.S. army soldiers (mashable.com)
6860.
HTC fingerprint phone unveiled early (bbc.co.uk)
6861.
Ubuntu syncs up with OpenStack (zdnet.com)
6862.
Javascript exclusive job board (jsfu.org)
6863.
Your Obstacles to Self-Learning (self-proficient.com)
6864.
Meet the man behind gaming's greatest tunes (redbull.com)
6865.
China’s official news agency calls for 'De-Americanization of the World' (news.xinhuanet.com)
6866.
Zerocoin (zerocoin.org)
6867.
Banksy stall sells art works for $60 in New York (bbc.co.uk)
6868.
Running at 99%: Mitigating Application DoS Attacks (blog.risk.io)
6869.
'Diamond rain' falls on Saturn and Jupiter (bbc.co.uk)
6870.
How to avoid a common product mistake (bothsidesofthetable.com)