2014 Archive
2911.
Zynga Lays Off 15% of Its Workforce (techcrunch.com)
2912.
Show HN: I built this game alone – design, code, music, sound, marketing (toucheliss.com)
2913.
Hijacking user sessions with the Heartbleed vulnerability (mattslifebytes.com)
2914.
Kickstarter passes $1B in pledges (kickstarter.com)
2915.
Let's put the future behind us (antipope.org)
2916.
Cryptocurrencies will create a fifth protocol layer (startupboy.com)
2917.
Elixir Release v1.0.0 (github.com)
2918.
Unfinished game – learn by practice (github.com)
2919.
Did removing lead from petrol spark a decline in crime? (bbc.com)
2920.
GCC 4.9 is doing “some seriously crazy shit” according to Linus Torvalds (lkml.org)
2921.
I Don’t Want to Hire Women (clarissasblog.com)
2922.
Why Is Google Blocking Inbox on Firefox? (gist.github.com)
2923.
TigerDirect.com Now Accepts Bitcoin Payments (tigerdirect.com)
2924.
AT&T’s GigaPower plans turn privacy into a luxury that few would choose (gigaom.com)
2925.
Virgin births in animals are no longer rare (bbc.com)
2926.
YouTube to block indie labels who don't sign up to new music service (theguardian.com)
2927.
N.S.A. Collecting Millions of Faces From Web Images (nytimes.com)
2928.
Show HN: Steady – Shoot Cinematic Videos (steady.stupeflix.com)
2929.
Alibaba Raises $21.8B in Initial Public Offering (nytimes.com)
2930.
React: Another Level of Indirection (lispcast.com)
2931.
Pinboard 2014 Expenses (docs.google.com)
2932.
Stay Classy Makerbot (openbeamusa.com)
2933.
The NSA’s Secret Role in the U.S. Assassination Program (firstlook.org)
2934.
New algorithm can dramatically streamline solutions to the ‘max flow’ problem (web.mit.edu)
2935.
Intro to Distributed Hash Tables (freedomlayer.org)
2936.
White House nixes Patent Office pick after tech-sector outcry (arstechnica.com)
2937.
Structure and Interpretation of Computer Programs: Interactive Version (xuanji.appspot.com)
2938.
Startup School 2014 Recap and Videos (blog.ycombinator.com)
2939.
Building Bigger Roads Makes Traffic Worse (wired.com)
2940.
Amazon has sold no more than 35,000 Fire phones, data suggests (theguardian.com)