October 2015 Archive
331.
Immutable Data Structures and JavaScript (jlongster.com)
332.
402: Payment Required (medium.com)
333.
All the UML you need to know (cs.bsu.edu)
334.
Copy-Pasting URLs from Google Search Can Leak Previous Searches (medium.com)
335.
CSSgram: CSS library for Instagram filters (github.com)
336.
Faxes from the far side of the moon (damninteresting.com)
337.
What’s Really Killing Digital Health Startups (techcrunch.com)
338.
The Decline of ‘Big Soda’ (nytimes.com)
339.
Java 8’s new Optional type doesn't solve anything (medium.com)
340.
The Most Mysterious Star in Our Galaxy (theatlantic.com)
341.
Accelerated Mobile Pages Project (ampproject.org)
342.
FastMail is not required to implement the Australian metadata retention laws (blog.fastmail.com)
343.
Protopiper: Physically Sketching Room-Sized Objects at Actual Scale (hpi.de)
344.
U.S. Will Require Drones to Be Registered (nbcnews.com)
345.
The Thirty-Seven Basic Plots, According to a Screenwriter of the Silent Film Era (slate.com)
346.
OpenBSD 5.8 released (openbsd.org)
347.
Rikers Drove My Innocent Patient to Plead Guilty (politico.com)
348.
Forgotten Language: Jorf could have been Python or Ruby (2005) (ralsina.me)
349.
Show HN: Arguman – Argument Analysis Platform (en.arguman.org)
350.
How to Download a List of All Registered Domain Names (jordan-wright.com)
351.
Scientists create a working animal limb in a lab (bioengineer.org)
352.
Google Launches a Developer Boot Camp, Promising Jobs for Graduates (bloomberg.com)
353.
Probability, Paradox, and the Reasonable Person Principle (nbviewer.ipython.org)
354.
Medical Breakthrough in Spinal Cord Injuries Was Made by a Computer Program (fastcoexist.com)
355.
Mozilla Launches Open-Source Support Program (blog.lizardwrangler.com)
356.
Has It Become Impossible to Prosecute White-Collar Crime? (bloomberg.com)
357.
Turning the iPhone 6s Into a Digital Scale (medium.com)
358.
UK police use terror powers to seize BBC Newsnight journalist's laptop (independent.co.uk)
359.
Meteor Galaxy, a cloud platform for Meteor applications (info.meteor.com)
360.
Convicted by Code: Defendants should be able to inspect code used in forensics (slate.com)