January 2014 Archive
4201.
Federal Court Strikes Down Net Neutrality Rules, Sides with Big Telecom (gizmodo.com)
4202.
Writing Is Thinking (alistapart.com)
4203.
Philip Metzger's answer to “How feasible is Elon Musk's Mars colony idea?” (quora.com)
4204.
I Know You Need New Toner (shodanio.wordpress.com)
4205.
Speaking.io - Thoughts On Public Speaking (speaking.io)
4206.
Npmjs seems to be down half of the time (npmjs.org)
4207.
Coinpal for iOS: Coinbase Wallet Viewer & Contact Manager (coinp.al)
4208.
Canadian Courts to Business: We Don’t Take Privacy Violations Lightly (intersticeconsulting.com)
4209.
$90 million, is that the best we can do? (revsys.com)
4210.
Shopstarter to fill the void for successful Kickstarter campaigns (venturebeat.com)
4211.
Scuba Mask Creates Breathable Oxygen Underwater (themindunleashed.org)
4212.
Watch A Computer Try To Learn How To Walk (digg.com)
4213.
Xerox Strongly Urges You Not to Copy This Data (plainsite.org)
4214.
Zuckerberg Calls Snapchat A “Privacy Phenomenon” (techcrunch.com)
4215.
ClojureScript Analysis & Compilation (swannodette.github.io)
4216.
First confirmed record of a freshwater fish catching a bird midflight (nature.com)
4217.
Better colors for the web (github.com)
4218.
The 3 Most Surprising Insights From a 200 Website Eye-Tracking Study (blog.eyequant.com)
4219.
Google's Schemer is being shut down soon (schemer.com)
4220.
Amazon’s counterfeit goods problem (blog.brandisty.com)
4221.
How waffle.io sends automagic pull requests (waffle.io)
4222.
Would you use Erlang again? (quora.com)
4223.
Netflix Stock Dives After Net Neutrality Ruling (mashable.com)
4224.
Simulation of cat vision (mydeals.com)
4225.
A bass guitar made from a Commodore 64 (youtube.com)
4226.
Point-of-sale malware infecting Target found hiding in plain sight (arstechnica.com)
4227.
Steam Controller Ditches Touchscreen For Real Buttons (kotaku.com)
4228.
Python library to convert data into tangible 3D models (github.com)
4229.
CyanogenMod goes legit (theverge.com)
4230.
Starbucks caught storing mobile passwords in clear text (m.computerworld.com)