2013 Archive
2911.
You cannot have a digital copy of the DC Code (macwright.org)
2912.
Gluglug X60 Laptop now certified to Respect Your Freedom (fsf.org)
2913.
Why did a Train Carrying Biofuel Cross the Border 24 Times and Never Unload? (oilprice.com)
2914.
Snowden Interview with Jacob Applebaum (cryptome.org)
2915.
Oh, My Hand: Complaints Medieval Monks Scribbled in the Margins of Manuscripts (brainpickings.org)
2916.
Open Source Game Clones (osgameclones.com)
2917.
Goodbye Google Analytics. Hello Piwik (dicasdolampada.wordpress.com)
2918.
Steve Jobs Ponders His Legacy In Never-Before-Seen 1994 Video (macrumors.com)
2919.
Incredible Secret Money Machine (kk.org)
2920.
Phishing with Linkedin's Intro (jordan-wright.github.io)
2921.
Use a Google Spreadsheet as your JSON backend (coderwall.com)
2922.
Email transparency (stripe.com)
2923.
The Last Question (filer.case.edu)
2924.
Ask HN: A patent troll is targeting my transit app
2925.
MIT can honor Aaron Swartz by fighting to make journals open to everyone (slate.com)
2926.
Ruby 2.1 Released (ftp.ruby-lang.org)
2927.
Papers and essays that every programmer should be aware of (projectmona.com)
2928.
What does "HREF" stand for? (2008) (tomayko.com)
2929.
Amnesty International on the detention of Greenwald's partner (amnesty.org)
2930.
Building a Crystal Clear Whiteboard (hackaday.com)
2931.
NSA chief: ‘We’re the only ones not spying on the American people’ (washingtonpost.com)
2932.
Association between muscular strength and mortality in men (2008) [pdf] (bmj.com)
2933.
Why am I being endorsed for skills and expertise I do not claim on my profile? (community.linkedin.com)
2934.
Google timer (google.com)
2935.
Debian: Change default desktop to xfce (anonscm.debian.org)
2936.
What's Tylenol Doing to Our Minds? (theatlantic.com)
2937.
Your Thoughts Can Release Abilities Beyond Normal Limits (scientificamerican.com)
2938.
Movie Subtitle Fansite Raided By Copyright Industry And Police (falkvinge.net)
2939.
Shopify accepts Bitcoin (ecommerce.shopify.com)
2940.
GPS signals are surprisingly easy to disrupt (economist.com)