June 2013 Archive
1801.
Ask HN: Have you ever helped a company build a back-door?
1802.
Kippt Pro: Advanced Search, Folders and Imports (blog.kippt.com)
1803.
Director Of National Intelligence Tries To Downplay PRISM Paranoia (techcrunch.com)
1804.
Thalmic Labs gets $14.5 million (gigaom.com)
1805.
Well, These New Zuckerberg IMs Won't Help Facebook's Privacy Problems (2010) (businessinsider.com)
1806.
The NSA, CALEA, and the hardware backdoors built into routers (required by law) ()
1807.
How I use email for marketing (nathanbarry.com)
1808.
CIA Releases Analyst's Tale of Cracking the Kryptos Sculpture (wired.com)
1809.
Hostage situation in progress on CalTrain (twitter.com)
1810.
Horses for courses: choosing Scala or Clojure (rrees.me)
1811.
A funny case of using the PC (luaz.blogspot.com)
1812.
Show HN: Manage access to Basecamp, GitHub, Heroku, and more (onboarder.co)
1813.
Show HN: fluent SQL – a minimalistic SQL builder for Java (github.com)
1814.
Shipping Insurance (blog.easypost.com)
1815.
How much information can you convey with a 1 bit interface? (justindunham.net)
1816.
Does Edward Snowden even exist? (washingtonpost.com)
1817.
Fears of National ID With Immigration Bill (nytimes.com)
1818.
The Scarcest Resource at Startups is Management Bandwidth (blossom.io)
1819.
Announcing a pre-release of F# 3.1 and the Visual F# tools in Visual Studio 2013 (blogs.msdn.com)
1820.
Open source style checker for Objective C (github.com)
1821.
These Guys Want to Hack Your Home And You Should Let Them (wired.com)
1822.
Analyzing Yahoo's PRISM non-denial (paranoia.dubfire.net)
1823.
Trail Me Up – StreetView for park trails (trailmeup.com)
1824.
Show HN: Air Code (twolivesleft.com)
1825.
Coursera Jumps the Shark (higheredstrategy.com)
1826.
Stealth Wear Aims to Make a Tech Statement (nytimes.com)
1827.
Playing notes with the Web Audio API: Polyphonic Synthesis (blog.chrislowis.co.uk)
1828.
US Embassy in Islamabad found wiretapping offices of the President (terminalx.org)
1829.
NSA PRISM puts "public" cloud in a new light (zdnet.com)
1830.
Shades: In-memory OLAP cubing, histograms, and more (github.com)