2008 Archive
13711.
Crime Is Up In Palo Alto. Yes, This Is Funny. (uncov.com)
13712.
Song & Animation featuring all Elements of the Periodic Table discovered until 1955 (privatehand.com)
13713.
FF3 user reported bug about SSL certificate warning (mail-archive.com)
13714.
Apple Exec Hired From IBM Ordered to Stop Work (pcmag.com)
13715.
Cuil Theory ()
13716.
Four philosophical questions to make your brain hurt (news.bbc.co.uk)
13717.
Algorithms At Dead-End: Cannot Squeeze Knowledge Out Of A Pixel (jeffjonas.typepad.com)
13718.
Super smart "Gen-Y"/HR webapp: Rypple (rypple.com)
13719.
Ask YC: Reading code of what open project had the most effect on you as a developer?
13720.
Youtube’s Desperation (blogmaverick.com)
13721.
UK technology Start-ups to be given £1bn fund (guardian.co.uk)
13722.
The Social Life of Routers (technologyreview.com)
13723.
The $2 million penalty clause (weblog.infoworld.com)
13724.
Nuclear Industry Growing Without Federal Handouts (foxnews.com)
13725.
Things I Hate: Video That Auto-plays (runningskull.com)
13726.
Q&A with Facebook’s Mark Zuckerberg, on hiring, growth, and its platform (venturebeat.com)
13727.
Rogue trader costs french bank $7 billion (news.bbc.co.uk)
13728.
Do you translate part time? (37signals-like approach to translating) (ebiwrite.com)
13729.
A Survival Guide For The Hobbyists (startupcrunch.org)
13730.
Why Google New Web Startups, You Ask? ()
13731.
Thai whiz kid launches location-aware Twitter-like service (venturebeat.com)
13732.
Interview with Johnny Lee - the guy who hacked the Wii remote (hackedgadgets.com)
13733.
Hacker News Passes 100,000 Items (news.ycombinator.com)
13734.
The Huff ["How to lie with statistics"] (badscience.net)
13735.
In France, Societe Generale's rogue trader is being hailed as a hero (guardian.co.uk)
13736.
RailsConf 2007 Videos (railsconf.blip.tv)
13737.
The Python IAQ: Infrequently Answered Questions (norvig.com)
13738.
Static typing considered harmful (blog.jayfields.com)
13739.
Perl, the first postmodern computer language (wall.org)
13740.
The Economist dissolves the conspiracy theories on the undersea Internet cables (economist.com)