April 2012 Archive
931.
Cadillac To Release Self-Driving Cars By 2015 (inquisitr.com)
932.
JavaScript caching framework for client side caching in the browser (github.com)
933.
Spine.js vs Backbone.js (hjortureh.tumblr.com)
934.
Apple Reports Second Quarter Results (apple.com)
935.
The 28 Corporations Supporting CISPA (intelligence.house.gov)
936.
The Computing Trend that Will Change Everything (technologyreview.in)
937.
Tips to succeed as a programmer (Facebook engineering Notes) (facebook.com)
938.
HTML5 Presentation (slides.html5rocks.com)
939.
Kim Dotcom responds to the latest procedural error (torrentfreak.com)
940.
The Need for Reproducibility in Academic Research (blog.scienceexchange.com)
941.
Mruby and MobiRuby (matt.aimonetti.net)
942.
Understanding TPP, ACTA's nastier, more secret little brother (techdirt.com)
943.
Klouchebag (klouchebag.com)
944.
Android Economics (asymco.com)
945.
SQL Injection Tools For Database Pwnage (darkreading.com)
946.
Magnetic Core Memory Reborn (2011) (corememoryshield.com)
947.
Adobe Officially Unveils CS6, $49/Month All-Inclusive Subscription Service (techcrunch.com)
948.
On the making of a girl nerd (mathbabe.org)
949.
Why your company shouldn't use Git submodules (codingkilledthecat.wordpress.com)
950.
PyCharm 2.5 python IDE released. (jetbrains.com)
951.
Know Your Gmail Stats using Gmail Meter (gmailblog.blogspot.com)
952.
Request an educational account at github (github.com)
953.
Finite Field Arithmetic and Reed-Solomon Coding (research.swtch.com)
954.
Mozilla Sandstone, Visual style for the Mozilla web universe (mozilla.org)
955.
It's the end of the world as we know it (and I feel fine) (blog.cryptographyengineering.com)
956.
What's the row of numbers on the copyright page of books? (blogs.msdn.com)
957.
How Computers Are Creating a Second Economy Without Workers (theatlantic.com)
958.
Entrepreneurship's Dirty Little Secret (kernelmag.com)
959.
A course in how to deal with ferocious intensity at Google (nytimes.com)
960.
"We need to work longer" - Why this is not what you want to say (manuel.kiessling.net)