June 2013 Archive
841.
OpenCola Soft Drink (colawp.com)
842.
The Making of Dwarf Fortress (2012) (gamasutra.com)
843.
NSA surveillance retrospective: AT&T, Verizon never denied it (news.cnet.com)
844.
Mozilla launches massive campaign on digital surveillance (blog.mozilla.org)
845.
Ć Programming Language - Compile C# subset to C, Java, C#, JS, AS, Perl and D (cito.sourceforge.net)
846.
Licenses Over Data: A Case Study with Github v BitBucket (techlawyer.com.au)
847.
GitHub Got Silly Rich. Next Step: 'Make More Awesome' (businessweek.com)
848.
Python Headless Web Browser Scraping on Amazon Linux (fruchterco.com)
849.
PivotTable.js: a JavaScript Pivot Table implementation (github.com)
850.
The Snowden Principle (pressfreedomfoundation.org)
851.
Beyond the default Rails environments (37signals.com)
852.
Experimenting with QUIC (blog.chromium.org)
853.
Redbus.in acquired for $138M (nextbigwhat.com)
854.
Here’s Why Firefox is Still Years Behind Google Chrome (howtogeek.com)
855.
Why is elliptic curve cryptography not widely used, compared to RSA? (crypto.stackexchange.com)
856.
Data Parallelism in Rust (smallcultfollowing.com)
857.
How Clash of Clans earns $500,000 a day with in-app purchases (gyrovague.com)
858.
Why to use Twitter, Facebook and Google Plus share links and not buttons (garron.me)
859.
“Practical Artificial Intelligence Programming With Java” by Mark Watson (leanpub.com)
860.
Vegas Tech, We Need To Talk (evernote.com)
861.
Functional JavaScript: Closure (blog.fogus.me)
862.
Screensiz.es – reference chart for device screen sizes (screensiz.es)
863.
Your API Consumers Aren’t Who You Think They Are (bryanhelmig.com)
864.
Bradley Manning Trial: Is Our Future an Orwellian Nightmare Or Info Anarchy? (policymic.com)
865.
The Decline and Fall of the English Major (nytimes.com)
866.
The BBC's hi-tech failure: Don't Mention It (economist.com)
867.
Michael Hastings, 'Rolling Stone' Contributor, Dead at 33 (rollingstone.com)
868.
Ruby 1.8.7 retired (ruby-lang.org)
869.
The Fallacy of Human Freedom (nationalinterest.org)
870.
A very old problem turns 20 (plus.maths.org)