- debian.org
-
John Key says Edward Snowden ‘may well be right’ about NSA spying on NZtheguardian.com
New Zealand PM refuses to rule out that Kiwi metadata is being intercepted by American intelligence -
Scottish Independence - What Could It Mean for Scottish Tech Startups? - The Yarnee Blogblog.yarnee.com
How the Scottish independence referendum on the 18th might affect the tech and startup world. - graphics.stanford.edu
- tools.pingdom.com
- strut.io
- arstechnica.com
-
The Traveling Salesman with Simulated Annealing, R, and Shinytoddwschneider.com
I built an interactive Shiny application that uses simulated annealing to solve the famous traveling salesman problem. You can play around with it to create and solve your own tours at the bottom of … -
Not Today v4.0equaltogether.posthaven.com
On Monday night, the 2012 Paycheck Fairness Act was shot down for the fourth time by the US Senate, in a vote smack down party lines. My color-commentary summarization of what the 2012 Paycheck... - 0pointer.net
- github.com
- news.ycombinator.com
-
twbs/bootstrapgithub.com
bootstrap - The most popular front-end framework for developing responsive, mobile first projects on the web. -
theft: Property-Based Testing for Cspin.atomicobject.com
theft is a a C library for property-based testing: It generates input to stress-test code, and can reduce failures detected to minimal failing input. -
Horizonhorizon.camera
Horizon lets you capture horizontal videos & photos no matter how you hold your device. Hold it upright, sideways or even keep rotating it while capturing, your moments will always stay horizontal! - randsinrepose.com
-
Is C Pass by Value or Reference?denniskubes.com
Pass by Value In the strictest sense of the word, everything in C is pass-by-value. This often confuses beginning C programmers, especially when it comes to pointers, arrays, and structs. So what do we mean when we say pass-by-value and pass-by-referen... - structr.org
- techsonian.net
-
Using Chaos Theory to Predict and Prevent Catastrophic 'Dragon King' Events | WIREDwired.com
Chaotic systems exhibit complex behavior and, occasionally, can end up with some catastrophic results: a stock market crash or an enormous earthquake, for example. But new research suggests that certain extreme events could be predicted and even preven...