October 2011 Archive
5131.
TorrentFreak: Which VPN Providers Really Take Anonymity Seriously? (torrentfreak.com)
5132.
White House Issues 'WikiLeaks' Order to Secure Classified Data (wired.com)
5133.
258 JSONP APIs: Get Your JSON Response Anywhere (blog.programmableweb.com)
5134.
The accidental minimalist. Four steps to the epiphany. (toomanytabs.com)
5135.
Hadoop Doesn’t Solve All Problems (blog.zillabyte.com)
5136.
Rubyists Already Use Monadic Patterns (dave.fayr.am)
5137.
Autonomous Car drives through city traffic in Berlin, Germany (youtube.com)
5138.
How To Bring Innovation to Life (quarkengineering.com)
5139.
Integer Overflow Checker (embed.cs.utah.edu)
5140.
Hacks Happy: Why are we happy? Dan Gilbert (fabumed.net)
5141.
Three things worth knowing. (chronicle.com)
5142.
SegmentFault, a Stack Overflow Clone for China’s Techies (techrice.com)
5143.
Rubber duck debugging (en.wikipedia.org)
5144.
Tricking a Nigerian scammer into hand writing an entire Harry Potter novel (419eater.com)
5145.
IPhone 4S already the most successful iPhone launch ever, says AT&T (edibleapple.com)
5146.
Android Market is Currently Blocked in China. Here are your Alternatives. (techrice.com)
5147.
You’ve Got To Admit It’s Getting Better (techcrunch.com)
5148.
Some comments on contributions to the renaissance of C++ (neosmart.net)
5149.
Steve Jobs And The Death Of America (businessinsider.com)
5150.
FP and Memristors. What do you think the implications could be ()
5151.
Intel’s Parallel Extensions for JavaScript (ajaxian.com)
5152.
OpenGL vs DirectX: The War Is Far From Over (rastergrid.com)
5153.
Unlocking Government Data with Socrata (blog.apievangelist.com)
5154.
Noisy.js - Automatic background noise generation (rappdaniel.com)
5155.
Facebook is fine with hate speech, as long as it's directed at women (guardian.co.uk)
5156.
Weaponized Tinderbox (jwz.org)
5157.
Lil Wayne on Steve Jobs (worldstarhiphop.com)
5158.
Secret panel can put Americans on "kill list" (politics.salon.com)
5159.
Sean Parker and the Chosen Two (smartcompany.com.au)
5160.
Cutting the cord: how the world's engineers built Wi-Fi (arstechnica.com)