February 2012 Archive
1711.
An Interactive Map of American Migration (forbes.com)
1712.
Show HN: we open sourced our startup's help desk as django-knowledge. ()
1713.
Db.addUser() appears in shell history, with cleartext passwords - MongoDB (jira.mongodb.org)
1714.
A Revolution is Coming: Networking for the Facebook Generation. (fastcompany.com)
1715.
AppHarbor adds RavenDB support (blog.appharbor.com)
1716.
Deterministic testing of event loops (williamedwardscoder.tumblr.com)
1717.
Everything You Need to Know About Jeremy Lin (thedailymuse.com)
1718.
Exec is hiring in SF (Justin Kan / YC W12) ()
1719.
More Conj 2011 Videos Available (clojure.com)
1720.
Latest pact on Internet piracy set to be derailed (ft.com)
1721.
Colorado woman must unencrypt hard drive (washingtonpost.com)
1722.
I'm 23. I have $3000. How can I best use it to make more money?
1723.
Post short messages to people nearby (anonymously). (minipost.me)
1724.
How to scare off female developers (rachelnabors.com)
1725.
Why do we spend money on things we used to get for free? (blog.trejdify.com)
1726.
Help I'm Losing My Writing Ability
1727.
Introducing TrailerMatic.com (blog.briangreenbaum.com)
1728.
Stalin's Human-Ape Hybrids (skeptoid.com)
1729.
BTJunkie shuts down: Are the Feds winning the war? (extremetech.com)
1730.
Proof That Startups Don't Care About Privacy (jnorthrop.me)
1731.
Comparing Facebook's IPO to Google's (tnl.net)
1732.
How to Ace that Google Dev Interview (technologywoman.com)
1733.
After Five Years, Draw Something Is an Overnight Hit for OMGPOP. Now What? (allthingsd.com)
1734.
Reminder: remove Google search history before new privacy policy (google.com)
1735.
Travis CI launches an awesome crowd funding site (love.travis-ci.org)
1736.
How Nasa makes those incredible high-res images of Earth (wired.co.uk)
1737.
An Introduction to the Theory of Computation - Eitan Gurari (cse.ohio-state.edu)
1738.
Twitter open sources its Effective Scala guide (twitter.github.com)
1739.
Neuroscientists identify how the brain works to select what we (want to) see (sciencedaily.com)
1740.
How can we let someone freeze to death in today's world? (thenewsandme.wordpress.com)