May 2014 Archive
2281.
Synchronized oscillators may allow for computing that works like the brain (kurzweilai.net)
2282.
The Critical Engineering Manifesto (criticalengineering.org)
2283.
Ask HN: how do you organize your startup research?
2284.
Octopart Excel Add-In (octopart.com)
2285.
"Gmail will continue to receive emails from non-Gmail addresses" (twitter.com)
2286.
Ask HN: What do you use Go for? ()
2287.
Show HN: HipstaDeploy – Generate and deploy static websites on CloudFront (github.com)
2288.
The Limits of the Digital Humanities (newrepublic.com)
2289.
Advice for young guys/gals in building a semi-successful online service
2290.
Ask HN: I want to contribute to an open source project. Where do I begin?
2291.
Show HN: Abbrase – password generation by abbreviated phrases (github.com)
2292.
Google: Links Will Become Less Important (huskyseo.co.uk)
2293.
SQL Injection on eBay.com.au subdomain (blog.internot.info)
2294.
GitHub: Search * "Confidential" "all rights reserved" (github.com)
2295.
The real 10 algorithms that dominate our world (medium.com)
2296.
Mapping the International Availability of Entertainment Services (macstories.net)
2297.
Inside Venice's Secession Movement (mises.org)
2298.
Mode 2 (en.wikipedia.org)
2299.
Lessons from Katie Cotton, Apple's Departing PR Boss (blog.hubspot.com)
2300.
The microscopic structures of dried human tears (smithsonianmag.com)
2301.
Solar FREAKIN' Roadways! (youtube.com)
2302.
Photos of an NSA “upgrade” factory show Cisco router getting implant (arstechnica.com)
2303.
Why Category Theory Matters (rs.io)
2304.
Let Over Lambda–50 Years of Lisp (letoverlambda.com)
2305.
Checkdesk: An Open Verification Toolkit for Journalists (checkdesk.org)
2306.
Monogamous societies superior to polygamous societies (blogs.discovermagazine.com)
2307.
When infection is good: sulfur-eating bacteria enlist viruses to acquire energy (lonelyspore.com)
2308.
Apple to Buy Beats for $3 Billion (online.wsj.com)
2309.
Where do Eureka moments come from? (newyorker.com)
2310.
Australian government likely to standardise on Drupal (computerworld.com.au)