| 1. | | Moving Atom to React (atom.io) |
| 407 points by _pius on July 2, 2014 | 136 comments |
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| 2. | | Beautiful web type – typefaces from the Google web fonts directory (hellohappy.org) |
| 346 points by KhalilK on July 2, 2014 | 66 comments |
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| 3. | | Tor exit node operator prosecuted in Austria (network23.org) |
| 286 points by msl on July 2, 2014 | 140 comments |
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| 4. | | Ask HN: Did you get "never have to work again rich" through software? |
| 272 points by hoodoof on July 2, 2014 | 177 comments |
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| 5. | | Why has Google cast me into oblivion? (bbc.com) |
| 271 points by graeme on July 2, 2014 | 146 comments |
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| 6. | | New York’s Shadow Transit (newyorker.com) |
| 239 points by philers on July 2, 2014 | 123 comments |
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| 7. | | [dupe] No crankshaft, no problem: Toyota's free piston engine is brilliant (roadandtrack.com) |
| 228 points by ilamont on July 2, 2014 | 105 comments |
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| 8. | | EU's right to be forgotten: Guardian articles have been hidden by Google (theguardian.com) |
| 233 points by lotsofmangos on July 2, 2014 | 74 comments |
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| 9. | | Rust 0.11.0 Released (mail.mozilla.org) |
| 207 points by veeti on July 2, 2014 | 134 comments |
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| 10. | | Venture Capitalist Tim Draper Wins Bitcoin Auction (nytimes.com) |
| 204 points by secondForty on July 2, 2014 | 96 comments |
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| 11. | | 54-line if condition in gcc's reload.c (github.com/mirrors) |
| 202 points by mgdo on July 2, 2014 | 90 comments |
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| 12. | | Are We Welcome Entrepreneurs or Unwanted Criminals? (medium.com/aurora) |
| 185 points by ladydi on July 2, 2014 | 142 comments |
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| 13. | | Six Months After Legalizing Marijuana, Two Big Things Have Happened in Colorado (mic.com) |
| 188 points by ca98am79 on July 2, 2014 | 108 comments |
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| 14. | | Coinbase introduces Vault (coinbase.com) |
| 183 points by mihar on July 2, 2014 | 62 comments |
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| 16. | | Show HN vs. TechCrunch vs. Product Hunt: what's most effective to launch a product (frontapp.com) |
| 189 points by mathouc on July 2, 2014 | 72 comments |
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| 18. | | My Treadwater Desk (doublestealth.blogspot.com) |
| 168 points by jgrahamc on July 2, 2014 | 62 comments |
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| 19. | | Questioning the Lambda Architecture (oreilly.com) |
| 178 points by boredandroid on July 2, 2014 | 12 comments |
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| 20. | | New RFS: One Million Jobs (blog.ycombinator.com) |
| 157 points by wasd on July 2, 2014 | 164 comments |
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| 21. | | JavaScript Modules (jsmodules.io) |
| 169 points by steveklabnik on July 2, 2014 | 73 comments |
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| 22. | | Russia Moves To Ban Online Services That Don’t Store Personal Data In Russia (techcrunch.com) |
| 162 points by tonymon on July 2, 2014 | 126 comments |
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| 23. | | Soundcloud Releases New App, Allows Universal to Flag Your Account (doandroidsdance.com) |
| 165 points by chippy on July 2, 2014 | 91 comments |
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| 24. | | Tinder's Forgotten Woman: Whitney Wolfe, Sexism, and Startup Creation Myths (businessweek.com) |
| 149 points by dbloom on July 2, 2014 | 98 comments |
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| 25. | | Discover a startup every time you open a new tab (startuptabs.com) |
| 139 points by instakill on July 2, 2014 | 71 comments |
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| 26. | | Google killer-robots.txt (google.com) |
| 135 points by yueq on July 2, 2014 | 23 comments |
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| 27. | | Segway Inventor Dean Kamen Thinks New Stirling Engine Will Get You Off the Grid (forbes.com/sites/christopherhelman) |
| 133 points by wglb on July 2, 2014 | 85 comments |
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| 28. | | IRS policy denies tax-exempt status to open source non-profits (arstechnica.com) |
| 118 points by EricaJoy on July 2, 2014 | 35 comments |
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| 29. | | Fuck the Super Game Boy (2010) (loveconquersallgam.es) |
| 115 points by jmduke on July 2, 2014 | 39 comments |
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| 30. | | Sick of Ruby, dynamic typing, side effects, and object-oriented programming (abevoelker.com) |
| 110 points by blakehaswell on July 2, 2014 | 94 comments |
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| More |
So if Amazon never prevails, why do they do it? One of the peculiar attributes of Amazon's action against us is that it was well publicized within Amazon -- and was apparently a result of outrage by a high-ranking executive after he learned that the former AWS engineer not only was working for a competitor, but had the gumption to open source a technology that he developed here. (Ironically, the executive only learned of all of this when the technology itself became a top story here on HN.) My conclusion from this: this action wasn't actually directed at us -- Amazon is smart enough to know that nothing would come of it with respect to our actions -- but rather at their own employees. That is, Amazon's pursuit of the non-compete against our engineer was their way of shooting an escapee in the back -- and sending a sharp message to any other AWS inmates with similar ambitions.
In terms of an immediate effect, Amazon's move worked to a degree: our next few hires from AWS were slowed a little bit by fear of similar action. That said, the fact that we had prevailed against Amazon also gave these engineers the confidence that we could and would do so again -- and ultimately, it didn't prevent anyone from matriculating. It did, however, have one lasting effect: the engineer that was pursued went from thinking fondly of his years at AWS to hating AWS and Amazon with a white-hot passion that still burns today. In the end, enforcing a non-compete is like erecting a Berlin Wall: if you feel you need it, you have much deeper problems...