May 2015 Archive
8041.
The trojan Emoji (poststatus.com)
8042.
Ten thousand commandments (cei.org)
8043.
15 awesome and free JavaScript books (tutorialzine.com)
8044.
Against the definition of types (tomasp.net)
8045.
Yeah, but Really, What Is DevOps? (techcrunch.com)
8046.
Xkcd: Emojic 8 Ball (xkcd.com)
8047.
Mobile carriers in Europe will reportedly block ads in effort to bully Google (theverge.com)
8048.
Patow: Run any windows software from any device after installing just once (patow-project.kickoffpages.com)
8049.
Slick 3: Reactive Streams for Asynchronous Database Access in Scala (infoq.com)
8050.
Bridging the Development Gap Between UX and Security (insights.dice.com)
8051.
Qt 5.5 Beta Released (blog.qt.io)
8052.
Microsoft’s plan to put voice recognition behind anything (arstechnica.com)
8053.
Oculus Details Rift’s Recommended PC Specs, ‘Pauses’ Mac Development (techcrunch.com)
8054.
Io.js joined Node.js Foundation, effectively remerging with Node.js (i-programmer.info)
8055.
AWS Directory Service (aws.amazon.com)
8056.
Cyber attack carried out on Bundestag (dw.de)
8057.
Identifying Music Genres with Deep Learning and Image Recognition (apassant.net)
8058.
After legal claim filed against GCHQ hacking, UK rewrites law to permit hacking (privacyinternational.org)
8059.
Phone-Based Login, Can You Dig It? (blog.parse.com)
8060.
Show HN: Python lib for writing long running processes with a cli interface (github.com)
8061.
Async and await in Python 3.5 explained (lwn.net)
8062.
Elon Musk's Space Dream (bloomberg.com)
8063.
Why It's Vital to Kill Your Own Ideas (huffingtonpost.com)
8064.
The Horrible World of Video Game Crunch (kotaku.com)
8065.
My self-published book's Kickstarter campaign: How I did it, what I regret (hellowebapp.com)
8066.
HN Chrome Extension (chrome.google.com)
8067.
Coding the Future (bbc.com)
8068.
FileStorage.at, a directory of free file hosting providers (filestorage.at)
8069.
Amazon to Anoint ‘Choice’ Products Sold Through Its Echo Speaker (blogs.wsj.com)
8070.
Cyberattacks on Oil and Gas Firms Launched with No Malware at All (securityaffairs.co)