March 2015 Archive
4771.
If You Die in This Game, You Can Never Play Again. Ever (kotaku.com)
4772.
Gonepass – a 1Password reader for Linux (github.com)
4773.
Alibaba, Prince Alwaleed Go in on Snapchat’s $500M Round (techcrunch.com)
4774.
Learning to design is learning to see (ia.net)
4775.
Developer interruptions, brogrammer culture, and sorry state of our toolchain (levinotik.com)
4776.
How to Become an AWS Cloud Architect (cloudacademy.com)
4777.
Bugcrowd Raises $6M Series A (blog.bugcrowd.com)
4778.
Photoshop experts try to use Photoshop 1.0 (youtube.com)
4779.
The web of names, hashes and UUIDs (joearms.github.io)
4780.
NTP's Fate Hinges on 'Father Time' (informationweek.com)
4781.
Shakespeare in Tehran (nybooks.com)
4782.
Self-driving Cars in 30 US Cities by the end of 2016 (proton4.com)
4783.
Why I like TikZ's Math library (latex-community.org)
4784.
Video Games Are Better Without Characters (theatlantic.com)
4785.
Goodyear Is Trying to Make an Electricity-Generating Tire (wired.com)
4786.
Asseta (YC S13) Raises a Million for Its Marketplace for Spare Parts (techcrunch.com)
4787.
John Gruber: ‘USB-C Is an Apple Invention’ (thetechblock.com)
4788.
Optimizing Rails for Memory Usage Part 4 Lazy JSON Generation and Final Thoughts (collectiveidea.com)
4789.
Facebook acquires and shutters shopping search engine TheFind (venturebeat.com)
4790.
Using Docker on Joyent vs. AWS (joyent.com)
4791.
Searching 20 GB/sec: Systems Engineering Before Algorithms (blog.scalyr.com)
4792.
For Tech Titans, Sharing Has Its Limits (nytimes.com)
4793.
Why the Kremlin can't effectively lie about Putin’s weird disappearance (washingtonpost.com)
4794.
23andMe Will Invent Drugs Using Customer Data (forbes.com)
4795.
The Long Story Behind GigaOm’s Sudden Demise (recode.net)
4796.
Hysteria and Teenage Girls (thehairpin.com)
4797.
The Codist: Really Complex Travel Software Doesn't Exist for a Reason (thecodist.com)
4798.
Can Spark Streaming Survive Chaos Monkey? (techblog.netflix.com)
4799.
A Bot Purchased Illegal Drugs – Who's to Blame? (disinfo.com)
4800.
The seven jobs of the future (ntucker.true.io)