November 2014 Archive
871.
64-bit ARM Kernel Development Demo on a Nexus 9 (osdevnotes.blogspot.com)
872.
Global Outage of AWS CloudFront CDN on Nov 26 2014 (turbobytes.com)
873.
Study shows brain interface between humans (washington.edu)
874.
Dateparser: Python parser for human readable dates (github.com)
875.
Introducing the Coinbase Tip Button (blog.coinbase.com)
876.
The First 3-D Printer in Space Makes Its First Object: A Spare Part (nbcnews.com)
877.
GNU GLOBAL source code tagging system (gnu.org)
878.
Show HN: WebGL Playground (jessevdk.github.io)
879.
Performance Tuning EC2 Instances (slideshare.net)
880.
User-agent string changes (msdn.microsoft.com)
881.
Stanford MBAs Shift Away from Tech (poetsandquants.com)
882.
War and Peace in the Bhagavad Gita (nybooks.com)
883.
Mexican Cartels Enslave Engineers to Build Radio Network (2012) (wired.com)
884.
Secrets of the Magus: Ricky Jay does closeup magic that flouts reality (1993) (newyorker.com)
885.
Medical Science Has a Data Problem (newsweek.com)
886.
An Introduction to Tensors for Students of Physics and Engineering (2002) [pdf] (grc.nasa.gov)
887.
Philae’s first touchdown seen by Rosetta (blogs.esa.int)
888.
Big things to expect from Emacs 25 (endlessparentheses.com)
889.
Memcomputing NP-complete problems in polynomial time (arxiv.org)
890.
Ask HN: Remote ROR developers, how much per hour you make?
891.
The Unbelievable Skepticism of the Amazing Randi (nytimes.com)
892.
Liu Cixin's “The Three-Body Problem” Is Published in the US (nytimes.com)
893.
Berkeley Logo (cs.berkeley.edu)
894.
Voxelstein 3d (voxelstein3d.sourceforge.net)
895.
The pitfalls of using ssh-agent, or how to use an agent safely (rabexc.org)
896.
Uruguay’s beloved Pepe bows out to spend time with his Beetle and 3-legged dog (theguardian.com)
897.
Destroying Medieval Books (medievalbooks.nl)
898.
Samples for using LLVM and Clang as a library (eli.thegreenplace.net)
899.
Kim Dotcom: “I'm broke” (german article) (translate.google.com)
900.
The world's biggest chocolate-maker says we're running out of chocolate (washingtonpost.com)