- play.google.com
- blog.internot.info
- bbc.com
- play.google.com
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If in doubt, innovateeconomist.com
IN 2010 A GROUP of students at Aalto University, just outside Helsinki, embarked on the most constructive piece of student activism in the history of the genre. They... - hackingdistributed.com
- mobile.nytimes.com
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If Euclid Played Video Games, This Is The App He'd Build To Teach Geometryforbes.com
VideoThere's a simple way to learn geometry over the summer. It is easy and fun. Imagine Euclidean geometry: the video game. If your experience in high school geometry was anything like mine, it probably sounds like torture. But games make learning fun... -
can be accessed here: https://www.google.com/images/srpr/logo10w.pngimgur.com
The most viral images on the internet, curated in real time by a dedicated community through commenting, voting and sharing. -
VoCore: A coin-sized Linux computer with wifiindiegogo.com
VoCore is an open hardware runs OpenWrt. It has WIFI, USB, UART, 20+ GPIOs but size is only one inch. It helps you make a smart house or study embedded system. -
Ripple Attack Dogs Descend on Resigned Board Memberfollowthecoin.com
Jesse Powell, former Ripple Board Member, is being attacked. - 24ways.org
- cs.utexas.edu
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Giants behaving badly: Google, Facebook and Amazon show us the downside of monopolies and black-box algorithmsgigaom.com
Google, Facebook and Amazon have shown us again this week why the combination of a quasi-monopoly, vested interests and an inscrutable algorithm can be a dangerous thing for internet users, since it allows them to influence what we see, know and buy -
First Recorded Usage of "Hacker" - Gustavo Duarteduartes.org
Here’s the first known recorded usage of the word “hacker” in the tech sense, published in 1963 in MIT’s The Tech newspaper: … -
Legion Meter - Charge your smartphone 92% fasterkickstarter.com
A USB multimeter with integrated OLED display designed to accelerate your smartphone or tablet's charge speed up to 92% faster. - en.wikipedia.org
- math.tut.fi
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Final Word on U.S. Law Isn’t: Supreme Court Keeps Editingnytimes.com
The Supreme Court has been quietly revising its decisions years after they were issued, a secretive process that has led judges, lawyers and scholars astray. - millcomputing.com