2015 Archive
10891.
A Serious Conversation about the Future in Space (bloomberg.com)
10892.
Currying in JavaScript (medium.com)
10893.
Caffeine at night does more than keep you up late (usatoday.com)
10894.
The Big Mac Index (economist.com)
10895.
Stop the Vertical Tab Madness (2010) (prog21.dadgum.com)
10896.
Your body wasn’t built to last: a lesson from human mortality rates (gravityandlevity.wordpress.com)
10897.
What does it feel like to be fired from Google? (quora.com)
10898.
Blade: a Java Web Framework (github.com)
10899.
Brunch: Replace gulp, grunt and increase your dev speed (github.com)
10900.
MySpace Still Reaches 50M People Each Month (blogs.wsj.com)
10901.
RegExpBuilder – Create regular expressions using chained methods (github.com)
10902.
Facebook listening to conversations through microphone? (np.reddit.com)
10903.
Big data in genomics: The $1k genome has arrived (nature.com)
10904.
Nebula is shutting down (nebula.com)
10905.
The discovery of lunar water has changed everything for human exploration (arstechnica.com)
10906.
Complex Car Software Becomes the Weak Spot Under the Hood (nytimes.com)
10907.
Hiking the 2,650-Mile Pacific Crest Trail (priceonomics.com)
10908.
Python bug: Can assign [] = (), but not () = [] (bugs.python.org)
10909.
Use pay phone to contact Australian Secret Intelligence Service recruitment (asis.gov.au)
10910.
Firefox for iOS Now Available for Preview in New Zealand (blog.mozilla.org)
10911.
I signed up to write apps for my Amazon Echo, Amazon sent me an NDA
10912.
Things will not change (tobiastom.name)
10913.
Google's Toughest Search Is for a Business Model (2002) (nytimes.com)
10914.
The tensor renaissance in data science (radar.oreilly.com)
10915.
Cssnext: use tomorrow’s CSS syntax, today (cssnext.io)
10916.
Shift.js: Swift to JavaScript Transpiler (github.com)
10917.
Radio Shack lost its way when it ditched its hobbyist customers (economist.com)
10918.
The 68000 Wars, Part 1: Lorraine (filfre.net)
10919.
The Lux Programming Language (github.com)
10920.
Relaxing with Runcible, the circular 'anti-smartphone' (engadget.com)