April 2014 Archive
9841.
Show HN: Growth hacks and UX for startups (growth.userium.com)
9842.
Charlemagne’s DNA and Our Universal Royalty (2013) (phenomena.nationalgeographic.com)
9843.
How Git redefined open source software development (opensource.com)
9844.
Silicon Valley's app culture eroding US ability to make serious software (cnet.com)
9845.
Strace + tcpdump + lsof = sysdig (sysdig.org)
9846.
API Documentation Matters More than Performance and Functionality (blog.smartbear.com)
9847.
Postmodern computing (asymco.com)
9848.
MongoDB 2.6 Production Release Highlights (blog.parse.com)
9849.
Heroes of Hardware Revolution: Bob Widlar (hackaday.com)
9850.
Twitter Rolls Out Facebook-esque Redesign (theverge.com)
9851.
How to run a project kickoff meeting. (blog.forcerank.it)
9852.
Minecraft, No Man's Sky, and the hunt for a true archaeology sim (killscreendaily.com)
9853.
ARM Introduce Open Source Software to Enable Sensor Hub Implementations (businesswire.com)
9854.
Very useful ruby lint (github.com)
9855.
Obituary: Windows XP (pcworld.com)
9856.
Cheap solar power – at night (technologyreview.com)
9857.
Drones on Demand – Uber for Drones (gofordrones.com)
9858.
LAPD officers tampered with in-car recording equipment, records show (latimes.com)
9859.
Chris Dixon: The decline of the mobile web (nonchalantrepreneur.com)
9860.
Disruptor Beam developing new Star Trek game (betaboston.com)
9861.
Heartbleed python script (gist.github.com)
9862.
Samsung Galaxy S 5 Review | AnandTech (anandtech.com)
9863.
Running Windows XP programs on Linux Mint with CrossOver (zdnet.com)
9864.
Red Hat and Google Solidify Compute Engine Agreement (ostatic.com)
9865.
WANTED: Software/Python Developer (zogotech.com)
9866.
Don't drink your own Kool-Aid (sub.garrytan.com)
9867.
7 ways I’ve almost killed FreshBooks (startupsanonymous.com)
9868.
Ask HN: How do distributed certificate authorities (eg tack) handle Heartbleed? ()
9869.
Please support this iOS Application Development Course [Kickstarter] ()
9870.
Here's the problem with an "internet of things" future (wired.com)