April 2014 Archive
4981.
An Exploration of ARM TrustZone Technology (genode.org)
4982.
JetPack security update (jetpack.me)
4983.
How to save your next great idea (thenextweb.com)
4984.
2014 crash will be worse than 1987's (cnbc.com)
4985.
Running JavaScript in an iOS application with JavaScriptCore (infinum.co)
4986.
The Dragon Economy: How Smaug's death doomed Middle-earth (crunch.co.uk)
4987.
The LHC Has Found a New Particle Unlike Any Other Form of Matter (gizmodo.com)
4988.
Navy powers model plane using fuel made from sea water (youtube.com)
4989.
Akamai contributes OpenSSL patch to protect private keys from Heartbleed ()
4990.
U.S and India rank lowest on Facebook transparency report (gizmorati.com)
4991.
OpenBSD fixes use-after-free race condition in OpenSSL (ftp.openbsd.org)
4992.
Autism, Like Race, Complicates Almost Everything (npr.org)
4993.
How we hacked Google’s production server and received a $10K reward (freshtechapps.com)
4994.
Passwords are Obsolete (medium.com)
4995.
How Bitcoin Works (Video) (youtube.com)
4996.
Freelancer.com acquires Warrior Forum (press.freelancer.com.s3.amazonaws.com)
4997.
Foldscope: Origami based print and fold paper-microscope (foldscope.com)
4998.
80% of your culture is your founder (firstround.com)
4999.
The History of the Future: a Technology Reading List (blog.longreads.com)
5000.
Elites, Interest Groups, and Average Citizens (princeton.edu)
5001.
Can Facebook Innovate? (bits.blogs.nytimes.com)
5002.
The world’s most viewed picture is of a hill in Sonoma (blog.sfgate.com)
5003.
Safari 7.1 adds IndexedDB (html5test.com)
5004.
Ask HN: How popular is TypeScript outside of the Microsoft ecosystem? ()
5005.
Over third of Galaxy S5 upgrades come from iPhone owners (telegraph.co.uk)
5006.
How One Tiny Business is Dominating Social Media (inc.com)
5007.
10 Sci-Fi Connected Objects that came true (rudebaguette.com)
5008.
NTP is broken under MacOS 10.9 (discussions.apple.com)
5009.
Squarepusher x Z-Machines – The making of stupendous music machines (creativeapplications.net)
5010.
Rust for C++ programmers – an intermission – why Rust (featherweightmusings.blogspot.com.au)