October 2012 Archive
1681.
WebGL Meeting - chat with friends in 3D (jeromeetienne.github.com)
1682.
dm-cache: new caching method that operates within the Linux kernel (github.com)
1683.
Business people: good guys vs. bad guys (smalldogsbigdogs.tumblr.com)
1684.
Doodle Jump in HTML5 (codetheory.in)
1685.
Ceefax: The early days (bbc.co.uk)
1686.
Domain-Specific Languages made simpler (jeffreykegler.github.com)
1687.
HTTPS Everywhere 3.0 protects 1,500 more sites (eff.org)
1688.
Companies Can Now Claim Their Profiles On Developer Reputation Site Coderwall (techcrunch.com)
1689.
Show HN: Soragora Helps You Build Real-Time, Multiplayer Mobile Games (soragora.com)
1690.
Beg HN: Stop Being So Condescending (tommy.authpad.com)
1691.
Hacking Facebook to remove the social value facade (hackaday.com)
1692.
Latent Semantic Analysis in Ruby (blog.josephwilk.net)
1693.
Mozilla adds sweetener to JavaScript (h-online.com)
1694.
XMPP great for federation, not for queuing: a lesson from Livefyre's early days (blog.fanout.io)
1695.
San Francisco HN Meetup ()
1696.
Violentacrez Did It All for ‘Meaningless Internet Points’ on Anderson Cooper (betabeat.com)
1697.
Thoughts on dropping out to do a startup (joel.is)
1698.
The Tech Behind Apple’s Impossibly Thin New iMacs (wired.com)
1699.
The Next Big Idea to Change the World? 3D Printing (startupceo.co.za)
1700.
Hacking Mountain Lion: Bringing the old Web Inspector back (thomasst.ch)
1701.
42% of US Internet Users Have a Facebook Account. For Twitter, It’s 16% (diegobasch.com)
1702.
HAML vs ERB vs SLIM in terms of render speed (github.com)
1703.
How To Sell A Digital Comic (warrenellis.com)
1704.
Boeing engineer: more evidence on the assassination of Polish president in 2010 (dianawest.net)
1705.
Amazon Attacking Apple's iPad Mini on Homepage (amazon.com)
1706.
Rules to sell thousands of copies of your ebook (mir.aculo.us)
1707.
Tin Foil Hats Actually Make it Easier for the Government to Track Your Thoughts (theatlantic.com)
1708.
Why Bitcoin is a Prime Target for Hackers (scanmysite.net)
1709.
As Microsoft Shifts Its Privacy Rules, an Uproar Is Absent (nytimes.com)
1710.
Pirate Bay Power Usage Equivalent to a Vacuum Cleaner (torrentfreak.com)