August 2015 Archive
2641.
Ask HN: Time to update my skills. What should I do? ()
2642.
Phoneless in Paris (bbc.co.uk)
2643.
The Goddam Particule (sniperinmahwah.wordpress.com)
2644.
The most American thing there is: eating alone (washingtonpost.com)
2645.
Comcast admits its 300GB data cap serves no technical purpose (bgr.com)
2646.
Duped ‘Dads’ Aren’t the Only Ones Hurt by Paternity Fraud (noozhawk.com)
2647.
Show HN: Chic Translator – Translations that don't suck (chictranslator.com)
2648.
TrueCrypt 'decrypted' by FBI to nail doc-stealing sysadmin? (theregister.co.uk)
2649.
All Websites Look the Same (novolume.co.uk)
2650.
Children's Acquisition of False Memories in Virtual Reality (2009) [pdf] (vhil.stanford.edu)
2651.
E-CAT Patent Granted by USPTO (ecat.com)
2652.
Abusing the MPC-HC WebUI to steal private pictures (3vildata.tumblr.com)
2653.
Not Everyone Can Program: As Seen in Pixar’s Ratatouille (medium.com)
2654.
MiniMagAsm: Minimalistic but Powerful CMS Implemented in ASM (asm32.info)
2655.
Show HN: Roomchat – No signup instant custom chat rooms (roomchat.co)
2656.
Where is a good place to find remote friendly companies? ()
2657.
The Jaguar and the Fox (2000) (theatlantic.com)
2658.
German student ditches apartment, buys an unlimited train pass (boingboing.net)
2659.
Earliest 'modern' hand nearly two million years old (phys.org)
2660.
Snapchat generated only $3.1M last year (businessinsider.com)
2661.
The Indoor Rainforest Iowa Almost Built (inverse.com)
2662.
TetraScience’s (YC S15) Internet-Of-Instruments Could Supercharge Research (techcrunch.com)
2663.
6 Ways to Get to a Million Users (medium.com)
2664.
Project Euler hacked? ()
2665.
Where broadband is a utility, 100Mbps costs just $40 a month (arstechnica.com)
2666.
Google’s $6B Miscalculation on the EU (bloomberg.com)
2667.
The First Hand-Painted Films (nautil.us)
2668.
A glossary of Boontling, the Strange Jargon of Boonvile, CA (theparisreview.org)
2669.
The math behind RSA encryption (sevko.io)
2670.
How the modern world came to recognize autistic people (wired.com)