May 2014 Archive
4261.
This year's Bilderberg conferenced discusses "does privacy exist?" (theguardian.com)
4262.
Would You Pay $1,000 Once to Get Free Beer for Life? (nationaljournal.com)
4263.
Ex-Microsoft CEO Ballmer to buy NBA's LA Clippers for $2 billion (espn.go.com)
4264.
Sherlock Holmes was right: Interference Theory of Forgetting (en.wikipedia.org)
4265.
Quantum phenomenon shown in $15m D-Wave computer (bbc.com)
4266.
Hacking Victim Becomes Attacker (geek.com)
4267.
The Homeless Coder and America’s Cult of Entrepreneurship (nymag.com)
4268.
How Book Publishers Can Beat Amazon (nytimes.com)
4269.
If SaaS Products Sell Themselves, Why Do We Need Sales? (a16z.com)
4270.
Why are you buying our $300K Product? (blogs.law.harvard.edu)
4271.
Multigrid Methods with Repa (readerunner.wordpress.com)
4272.
Do I have to relinquish my PC password to my boss? (workplace.stackexchange.com)
4273.
NixOS 14.04 Released (nixos.org)
4274.
Programming isn't manual labor, But it still sucks. (mashable.com)
4275.
RapidSSL gets an F on SSL Labs (ssllabs.com)
4276.
Coding Sucks: Why a Job in Programming Is Absolute Hell (gizmodo.com)
4277.
Kendo UI Chrome Inspector (developer.telerik.com)
4278.
Vanhawks Valour (kickstarter.com)
4279.
"We design for screens so we need to think on screens." Inside design at Xero (blog.invisionapp.com)
4280.
2014 President's Big Data and Privacy Working Group Report (eff.org)
4281.
The Amazing Contents of Steve Wozniak's Travel Backpack (gizmodo.com)
4282.
Solved: How Ancient Egyptians Moved Massive Pyramid Stones (livescience.com)
4283.
Smart Wind and Solar Power: Big data and artificial intelligence (technologyreview.com)
4284.
White House extends data privacy protections to non-US citizens (theguardian.com)
4285.
Programming With Nothing (codon.com)
4286.
Grow fast or die slow (mckinsey.com)
4287.
How Steve Wozniak Wrote BASIC for the Original Apple From Scratch (gizmodo.com)
4288.
Modern source-to-source transformation with Clang and libTooling (eli.thegreenplace.net)
4289.
Large companies need to disrupt themselves or be disrupted (washingtonpost.com)
4290.
Son, It’s Time We Talk About Where Startups Come From. (mcsweeneys.net)