April 2015 Archive
3481.
How to Memorize a Random 60-Bit String [pdf] (isi.edu)
3482.
Ask HN: What happened to avg? ()
3483.
The new Macbook is slower than the 2011 Macbook Air (businessinsider.com)
3484.
From Tackles to Tangles: Why Head Hits Wreck Some Athletes’ Brains (nautil.us)
3485.
Altamura Man yields oldest Neanderthal DNA sample (phys.org)
3486.
Laplacian Sigils: William George Armstrong’s Electrical Discharge Experiments (dataisnature.com)
3487.
Unparticles may provide a new path to superconductivity (phys.org)
3488.
The Ruby Type Checker [pdf] (cs.umd.edu)
3489.
Fall of the Designer Part I: Fashionable Nonsense (elischiff.com)
3490.
Opbeat Integration with Gondor (gondor.io)
3491.
I spoke at our PTA about games (penny-arcade.com)
3492.
What Happens at AngelPad (techcrunch.com)
3493.
On Arrays.fill, Intrinsics, SuperWord and SIMD Instructions (psy-lob-saw.blogspot.com)
3494.
Famous mountain lion P-22 has made himself right at home under an LA porch (washingtonpost.com)
3495.
On the Uses and Disadvantages of History for Life (1874) [pdf] (leudar.com)
3496.
Chrome starts pushing Java off the Web by disabling plugins (arstechnica.com)
3497.
Tech Bubble? Maybe, Maybe Not (medium.com)
3498.
The Computer, the Consumer and Privacy (1984) (nytimes.com)
3499.
The Pollen Detective: A Scientific Murder Mystery (medium.com)
3500.
HipChat Acquires Blue Jimp and Jitsi.org (blog.hipchat.com)
3501.
Show HN: Optimizing Your Google Analytics Setup Made Easy (insightswebanalytics.com)
3502.
The Feel-Good Gene (nytimes.com)
3503.
Code review best practices (glen.nu)
3504.
Why we decided to expose all of our failures to 400k listeners (advice.datingring.com)
3505.
Woman behind Pakistan’s first hackathon, shot dead by unknown gunmen (dawn.com)
3506.
The Skyrim mod that's also a job application (gamasutra.com)
3507.
The 2048 guys stole my iPhone game (medium.com)
3508.
Petulant Penguin Hackers Use Antarctica as Base (securityledger.com)
3509.
I Followed My Stolen iPhone Across the World (buzzfeed.com)
3510.
“Unquestionable greed,” the startup CEO who stole $765k from his friends (arstechnica.com)