April 2014 Archive
21511.
Is your site up? Automated monitoring for your site and domains (domaintower.com)
21512.
Chlorine: From toxic chemical to household cleaner (bbc.co.uk)
21513.
Louis Vuitton Sunglasses,Louis Vuitton Outlet 2014 (lvcheapsunglasses.com)
21514.
TheFoolsProduction1965:Ugly and Truly ()
21515.
Google Analytics Now Lets You Track Web And App Data In A Single View (techcrunch.com)
21516.
Talking Drugs (mag.newsweek.com)
21517.
Readmoo Is The New Browser Reader For Ebook Reading, Sharing, And Discovering (asiatechhub.com)
21518.
Are there any silent Windows laptops? (theguardian.com)
21519.
مخلفات مواد البناء تعود من جديد بالزلفي | اخبارية الزلفي (s-zulfi.com)
21520.
Bad News and Worse News for Russian Internet Users (globalvoicesonline.org)
21521.
Which bits of a 4k page actually get used? (cartesianproduct.wordpress.com)
21522.
Learning and yet making same mistakes again ()
21523.
Ephemeral Diffie-Hellman for email communications (github.com)
21524.
Ask HN: Who do you use for offsite data backup? ()
21525.
Classifieds (usa.mallli.com)
21526.
Web Development for Everyone (using APIs) (devmix.launchrock.com)
21527.
The awesome, web-powered future of television (werd.io)
21528.
Apple Maps satellite image believed to show Loch Ness Monster (examiner.com)
21529.
Karmawhoring on reddit and the Front Page’s Econometrisation (peerproduction.net)
21530.
The Rapture of the Nerds (time.com)
21531.
Being sorta useful in vim (kivikakk.ee)
21532.
Mezzanine 3.1 for Workgroups (blog.jupo.org)
21533.
Google sharpens contact lens vision (phys.org)
21534.
Easy Mock Cassata Easter Cake Recipe (pegasuslegend-whatscookin.blogspot.com)
21535.
The Million-Dollar Manhattan Apartment (nytimes.com)
21536.
At the Right Time and for the Right Thing (ruoyusun.com)
21537.
How the original iPhone forced Google to completely rebuild Android (Dec. 2013) (bgr.com)
21538.
Suprafleece Ear (ebay.co.uk)
21539.
Nike reportedly abandons the FuelBand and lays off its hardware division (theverge.com)
21540.
Nike fires majority of FuelBand team, will stop making wearable hardware (cnet.com)