July 2014 Archive
7891.
The hacker who went to war with Riot Games (dailydot.com)
7892.
Verizon Promises 2 Years Of Free Data Access To Chromebook Users; Delivers 1 (techdirt.com)
7893.
John Nash's PhD Thesis [pdf] (dl.dropboxusercontent.com)
7894.
Freeman Dyson Predicts the Future: Interactive Video (youtube.com)
7895.
How Tests Make Us Smarter (nytimes.com)
7896.
Hackers reverse-engineer NSA's leaked bugging devices (newscientist.com)
7897.
​Get Free Airport Wi-Fi Using Chrome or Firefox's Developer Tools (lifehacker.com)
7898.
Anatomy of a system call, part 2 (lwn.net)
7899.
JPA 2.1 Performance Tuning Tips (osama-oransa.blogspot.com)
7900.
List of security products recommended by Edward Snowden (plus.google.com)
7901.
Stympy/faker: A library for generating fake data (github.com)
7902.
What does it mean to be “sh compatible”? (unix.stackexchange.com)
7903.
Why I Bought a Macbook Pro (sfericalcube.blogspot.com)
7904.
Data Driven DNS – NSONE Managed DNS (nsone.net)
7905.
Designer's contribution is valuable for a startup success at Preseed (medium.com)
7906.
H3: The Fast HTTP header parser library in C (github.com)
7907.
The games Putin plays (nydailynews.com)
7908.
Will Science Burst the Multiverse's Bubble? (news.discovery.com)
7909.
Letter to a Young Bartender (yahoo.com)
7910.
Communication Protocols (tantek.pbworks.com)
7911.
Show HN: Bunchcut – Make quicker better image decisions (bunchcut.com)
7912.
Conversations with Uber – Memoirs of an Uber Rider (medium.com)
7913.
What makes mental time travel possible? (2003) (apa.org)
7914.
Clone Your Entire IT Infrastructure in the Cloud (devops.com)
7915.
A real keyboard for programmers? (naildrivin5.com)
7916.
Why the Internet of Things Narrative Has to Change (thenextweb.com)
7917.
MicroXwin Creators Have A PC That Runs Debian and Android Together (phoronix.com)
7918.
US government says online storage isn't protected by the Fourth Amendment (engadget.com)
7919.
The End of Genius (mobile.nytimes.com)
7920.
The 'Facebook Cop' and the Implications of Privatized Policing (theatlantic.com)