January 2014 Archive
6361.
Moving from Wordpress to Github Pages (perfectionkills.com)
6362.
The Serval Project - wireless mesh networking for your phone (servalproject.org)
6363.
Google Buys Nest for $3.2 Billion in Cash (mashable.com)
6364.
A Sleeper in the Internet of Things War (avneeshkohli.com)
6365.
Early Investor Shares Insights into NEST (lsvp.com)
6366.
Reading and Parsing External Data in R (blog.safaribooksonline.com)
6367.
A $100 Worth Of Litecoin A Year Ago Is Worth $30,000 Today (forbes.com)
6368.
Elaine Wherry: Our Secret Weapon for Finding the Best Hires (blogs.wsj.com)
6369.
Team management application use cases (hiburo.com)
6370.
Help reform copyright in the EU (copywrongs.eu)
6371.
Future Of Electric Cars vs. Frigid NY Temps (wamc.org)
6372.
How our startup delivered $6.5 million in revenue in one year (shoestring.com.au)
6373.
Dataflow and Reactive Programming Systems|Asynchronous Dataflow Implementation (dataflowbook.com)
6374.
Why I Love Working at Keen IO (keen.io)
6375.
Chrome rendering engine will get faster, lighter, and better offline in 2014 (arstechnica.com)
6376.
There is no free software (peerproduction.net)
6377.
The Vicious Circle of Income Inequality (mobile.nytimes.com)
6378.
Getting Featured on the App Store - Big Banner Feature Does Not Equal Big Bucks (pixiteapps.com)
6379.
Symmetry in Programming Language Design (infoq.com)
6380.
The Bankruptcy of the American Dream (chris-maddox.com)
6381.
PayPal on GitHub (paypal.github.io)
6382.
Arts Foster Scientific Success (2008) [pdf] (emilkirkegaard.dk)
6383.
U.S. Supreme Court refuses to hear Internet shopping [Newegg] patent case (chicagotribune.com)
6384.
‘The Procedure’ and how it is harming education (washingtonpost.com)
6385.
Researchers propose alternative way to allocate science funding (embo.org)
6386.
Lisp for the Web (leanpub.com)
6387.
The open office trap (newyorker.com)
6388.
Model View Culture (modelviewculture.com)
6389.
Writing A Better JavaScript Library For The DOM (coding.smashingmagazine.com)
6390.
It Is Expensive to Be Poor (theatlantic.com)