May 2015 Archive
6631.
Running Python in a Browser Is More Awesome Than You Think (wired.com)
6632.
New vulnerability found in SSL called “Logjam” (thegeekbyte.com)
6633.
Tesla's new battery could be a huge blow to major Australian power companies (uk.businessinsider.com)
6634.
23 Resources for Finding Open Data (blog.sense.io)
6635.
Pushing fast forward: Roundcube Next (blogs.fsfe.org)
6636.
Regex101 – Online regex tester, debugger with group highlighting (regex101.com)
6637.
Free EBook: A Developer's Guide to App Marketing (learn.paddle.com)
6638.
An extensive math library for JavaScript and Node.js (mathjs.org)
6639.
Spitfire P9374 (christies.com)
6640.
An introduction to Clear Containers (lwn.net)
6641.
Architectural robots: The shape of the robots that will shape your home (robohub.org)
6642.
Keeping it lean with DIWO (do-it-with-others), a new startup work model (tripnary.com)
6643.
Tor 0.2.6.8 is released ()
6644.
Robert Reiner on bionic athletes and Cybathlon (robohub.org)
6645.
First Experiments with Apache Spark at Snowplow (snowplowanalytics.com)
6646.
Shopify shares surge 49% in their trading debut (marketwatch.com)
6647.
Document Manager Mayan EDMS, releases version 1.1.1 (pypi.python.org)
6648.
Architectural Agents: The Delusional, Abusive, Addictive Lives of Buildings (notevenpast.org)
6649.
Developers Read Bad Recruiting Emails (blog.entelo.com)
6650.
Mapbox launches mobile location analytics and free plan (mapbox.com)
6651.
Digital Gold (avc.com)
6652.
The Future of the JavaScript front-end framework (javascriptkicks.com)
6653.
Adult dating site hack exposes millions of users (channel4.com)
6654.
Physics paper sets record with more than 5,000 authors (nature.com)
6655.
Building scalable AngularJS Apps (angularchat.co)
6656.
Is Angry Birds Deterministic? (gaming.stackexchange.com)
6657.
How to finish what you Start (startuplabs.com)
6658.
What was the effect of Rand Paul’s 10-hour “filibuster?” (arstechnica.com)
6659.
Why Do Humans Have Chins? (smithsonianmag.com)
6660.
It's official: cash is dying (wired.co.uk)