2014 Archive
8581.
CC500: a tiny self-hosting C compiler (homepage.ntlworld.com)
8582.
Looking at Productivity as a State of Mind (nytimes.com)
8583.
The loneliest plant in the world (2011) (npr.org)
8584.
Yelp’s Style Guide (engineeringblog.yelp.com)
8585.
When Sysadmins Ruled the Earth (2007) (craphound.com)
8586.
systemd-networkd DHCP performance (plus.google.com)
8587.
D-day landings scenes in 1944 and now – interactive (theguardian.com)
8588.
Bootstrapping Rust (aidancully.blogspot.com)
8589.
Flip – A ReactJS Game (henleyedition.com)
8590.
Why lawmakers just voted against their own bill to reform the NSA (washingtonpost.com)
8591.
A call to arms: Helping Internet services accept anonymous users (blog.torproject.org)
8592.
Koinify: The Future of Crypto Crowd Funding (koinify.com)
8593.
Servo: Parallelizing the Browser (joshmatthews.net)
8594.
One mystery less, or how to get the “undumpable” ROM content dumped (e4aws.silverdr.com)
8595.
Analysis of 419,000 FlapMMO attempts (t3hz0r.com)
8596.
I learned just how far Uber will go to silence journalists and attack women (pando.com)
8597.
GPLGPU: An Open-Source GPU (gplgpu.com)
8598.
“The Great Plate Count Anomaly” that is no more (schaechter.asmblog.org)
8599.
Bandit Algorithms for Recommendation Systems (engineering.richrelevance.com)
8600.
Ask HN: What's your best startup idea that you're not going to pursue?
8601.
Most of the Amazon SES IP blacklisted by SpamCannibal (forums.aws.amazon.com)
8602.
High Frequency Trading and Finance's Race to Irrelevance (blogs.hbr.org)
8603.
Is Rust web yet? Not really (arewewebyet.com)
8604.
FBI blasts Apple, Google for locking police out of phones (washingtonpost.com)
8605.
The Future Programming Manifesto (alarmingdevelopment.org)
8606.
Dragdis – Drag and drop anything anywhere (dragdis.com)
8607.
Why I'm sending back Google Glass (computerworld.com)
8608.
When the Guy Making Your Sandwich Has a Noncompete Clause (nytimes.com)
8609.
Oculus VR’s New “Crystal Cove” Prototype Is Kind of Amazing (techcrunch.com)
8610.
Google’s New Bookmarking Service, Previously Called Stars, Has Gone Live (techcrunch.com)