February 2015 Archive
1471.
The Mexican immigrant who set up a global drone firm (bbc.com)
1472.
How Ta-Nehisi Coates built the best comment section on the internet (blog.longreads.com)
1473.
Mills' constant (en.wikipedia.org)
1474.
Show HN: AccountDock – Billing history for your Stripe app (accountdock.com)
1475.
The Socialist Origins of Big Data (2014) (newyorker.com)
1476.
A panel on mindfulness, meditation, self-care and mental health (medium.com)
1477.
The Original Macintosh: Calculator Construction Set (folklore.org)
1478.
Artemis pCell: Wireless Reinvented [pdf] (rearden.com)
1479.
Blanket your home with a fast, reliable WiFi and Bluetooth mesh network (eero.com)
1480.
I Quit (medium.com)
1481.
ESA experimental spaceplane completes research flight (esa.int)
1482.
Machine Learning at Stack Exchange (kevinmontrose.com)
1483.
RAD – Outlier Detection on Big Data (techblog.netflix.com)
1484.
What ISIS Really Wants (theatlantic.com)
1485.
Ask HN: Would you hire me (passionate hobbyist programmer) to a dev position?
1486.
Magic: How to launch a product so no one will ever use it again (tghw.com)
1487.
Gitless: experimental version control system (people.csail.mit.edu)
1488.
America’s Last Ban on Sunday Shopping (newyorker.com)
1489.
Apple will buy Tesla for $75b in 18 months (calacanis.com)
1490.
Hackers Cut in Line at the Burning Man Ticket Sale–And Get Caught (wired.com)
1491.
HiredBox – Ask the right questions in your technical interviews (hiredbox.com)
1492.
5G researchers manage record connection speed (bbc.co.uk)
1493.
Fixed Raises $650K More and Heads to Oakland (techcrunch.com)
1494.
Programming at the specification level with Haskell (fpcomplete.com)
1495.
Why the Euro will ultimately fail (maximise.dk)
1496.
Lisp as an Alternative to Java (2000) [pdf] (flownet.com)
1497.
AT&T is charging an extra $29/month to opt out of “tracking information” (businessinsider.com)
1498.
The Epic Fail of the Tech Elites (bryanappleyard.com)
1499.
High Performance Ruby in RPython (docs.topazruby.com)
1500.
Cold fusion E-Cat experiment ends explosively (wired.co.uk)