April 2014 Archive
1081.
Muen Kernel: Trustworthy by Design – Correct By Construction (muen.sk)
1082.
New 3DS Emulator (gbatemp.net)
1083.
Ask HN: Is Sublime Text dead?
1084.
Show HN: TruckPlease – Moving sucks, so we decided to make it easier (truckplease.com)
1085.
Show HN: My first project – Football voting app built in RubyMotion (footpoll.com)
1086.
Consumer Safety Notice for Nest Protect: Smoke and CO Alarm (nest.com)
1087.
Fifty Years of BASIC (time.com)
1088.
Show HN: Try Ion before you buy – uses BluetoothLE, Node.js, websockets, jsmpeg (tryion.lava.io)
1089.
Scientists Find an ‘Earth Twin,’ or Perhaps a Cousin (nytimes.com)
1090.
Mathematics: Why the brain sees maths as beauty (bbc.com)
1091.
Early Stage Startups: The Biggest Killers (forbes.com)
1092.
Amazon's Stressed Out Culture Is Burning Out Employees (minyanville.com)
1093.
Google I/O Registration 2014 (stancarney.co)
1094.
Imgur gets $40 million investment from Andreessen Horowitz (betabeat.com)
1095.
In Silicon Valley Thriller, a Settlement May Preclude the Finale (nytimes.com)
1096.
Functional C (1997) (eprints.eemcs.utwente.nl)
1097.
LHC spots particle that may be new form of matter (newscientist.com)
1098.
Microsoft Is Suddenly a New Company. But Is It Too Late? (wired.com)
1099.
Hands on with Ubuntu 14.04 (zdnet.com)
1100.
Facebook earnings gain as ad sales surge 82%; CFO is stepping down (marketwatch.com)
1101.
Ask HN: Is UML still relevant today?
1102.
A Fuel-Efficient Big Rig From Walmart (wired.com)
1103.
Single Address Space Operating System (c2.com)
1104.
Reference Note on Russian Communications Surveillance (csis.org)
1105.
WebCL – Heterogeneous parallel computing in HTML5 web browsers (khronos.org)
1106.
Internet at NPR (1994) (nprchives.tumblr.com)
1107.
Intercooler.js – A JavaScript-optional Ajax library (intercoolerjs.org)
1108.
Half-Billion-Year-Old Heart Found More Complex than Today’s (biosciencetechnology.com)
1109.
Student Who Recorded Bullies Tormenting Him Accused of Felony Wiretapping (aattp.org)
1110.
When the Internet dies, meet the meshnet that survives (newscientist.com)