March 2014 Archive
6931.
Twitters Experiments With Removing Replies (thenextweb.com)
6932.
A web based IRC client built with Node.js, node-irc and Backbone.js (github.com)
6933.
How the Biggest Scientific Discovery of the Year Was Kept a Secret (wired.com)
6934.
Ideas opensourced. (github.com)
6935.
Jeff Bezos, The Washington Post, and his plan to take over the media world (marginalrevolution.com)
6936.
A PHP client for Orchestrate (DBaaS) (orchestrate.io)
6937.
Twitter Getting Rid of Replies and Hashtags? (mashable.com)
6938.
Show HN: A LeapMotion DrumSet in Ruby (blog.carbonfive.com)
6939.
The Ultimate Guide to Starting and Growing Your Business (grasshopper.com)
6940.
Show HN: SellAFile – Sell a file using your Stripe account (sellafile.co)
6941.
What I Learned Hanging Out with Nigerian Email Scammers (motherjones.com)
6942.
Larry Page Spoke At TED, And Everyone Freaked Out Over His Ideas (businessinsider.in)
6943.
2048 Variants (phenomist.wordpress.com)
6944.
The book of bad arguments (bookofbadarguments.com)
6945.
Gmail is now HTTPS-only (googleblog.blogspot.in)
6946.
PixiJS: Super fast HTML 5 2D rendering engine (webGL with canvas fallback) (github.com)
6947.
Bloomberg terminal (en.wikipedia.org)
6948.
Anywhere in the world in three words (what3words.com)
6949.
Former Microsoft employee arrested over Windows 8 leaks (theguardian.com)
6950.
The Powerful Promise of a Puzzling New Microscopic Combustion Engine (technologyreview.com)
6951.
Kickstart your next project with a Walking Skeleton (blog.codeclimate.com)
6952.
The colossal arrogance of newsweeks Bitcoin scoop (arstechnica.com)
6953.
Introducing the iOS Reverse Engineering Toolkit (blog.veracode.com)
6954.
Google Doc template for drafting your YC app (docs.google.com)
6955.
Blender 2.70 released today (wiki.blender.org)
6956.
A Website Asks Readers to Finance Independent Journalists (nytimes.com)
6957.
Symantec's Fired CEO (online.wsj.com)
6958.
Introducing Hack – A Programming Language for HHVM (hhvm.com)
6959.
New Jersey Car Dealers Don't Like Tesla (No Kidding) (businessinsider.com)
6960.
Colleges whose graduates most frequently work in Silicon Valley (bizjournals.com)