January 2014 Archive
3991.
LivingSocial CEO steps down (blog.livingsocial.com)
3992.
RStats: visualizing app performance (spite.github.io)
3993.
Stranded by Sprawl (2013) (nytimes.com)
3994.
Virgil3D - a virtual 3D GPU for qemu (virgil3d.github.io)
3995.
Girl, 7, asks scientists for a dragon, gets standing job offer (today.com)
3996.
How to Name a Baby (waitbutwhy.com)
3997.
Theorems for Free (1989) [pdf] (ttic.uchicago.edu)
3998.
Why Are Dead People Liking Stuff On Facebook? (readwrite.com)
3999.
Abstaining From Alcohol Significantly Shortens Life (businessinsider.com)
4000.
How Google sets goals: OKRs (gv.com)
4001.
Helping people find water in Charleston, West Virginia (wvfindwater.com)
4002.
How I made sure all 12 of my kids could pay for college themselves (qz.com)
4003.
Facebook acquires link-sharing app Branch for $15 million (theverge.com)
4004.
Malbolge (en.wikipedia.org)
4005.
Rule #1: Make a Profit (blog.ponoko.com)
4006.
Reddit user manages to retrieve stolen laptop using remote access (reddit.com)
4007.
Error Propagation in Scientific Computing (functionspace.org)
4008.
Why your organization hates DevOps and won’t implement it this year (again) (zeroturnaround.com)
4009.
How to Knock Off a Bag (youtube.com)
4010.
Splitting a sandwich and feeling not deceived (math.stackexchange.com)
4011.
History of Rounded Corners (folklore.org)
4012.
Learn SQL, dammit (gun.io)
4013.
Retail in the age of Amazon: Scenes from an industry running scared (washingtonpost.com)
4014.
“MTV for Mobile” Mindie raises $1.2M led by SV Angels & Dave Morin (rudebaguette.com)
4015.
Using your TVs energy profile to determine what you were actually watching (homes.cs.washington.edu)
4016.
Instantly deploy GitHub and Bitbucket repos to your DigitalOcean servers (blog.dploy.io)
4017.
FireUser - a Firebase user management library for Angularjs (github.com)
4018.
The Infinite Sum of the Natural Numbers is -1/12 (sploid.gizmodo.com)
4019.
"What's wrong with TED talks?" Benjamin Bratton (youtube.com)
4020.
Amazon plans to ship your packages before you even buy them (theverge.com)