2008 Archive
20551.
The Enduring Art of Computer Programming (on Donald Knuth) (codinghorror.com)
20552.
Quick RESTful, authenticated API with ActiveResource and Rails (themcwongs.com)
20553.
Optimal frequency of blog posts (26econ.com)
20554.
The Physics of Information: What the Universe Doesn't Want You to Know [Conference Audio] (cbc.ca)
20555.
Google Calculator goes MAD (fubar.school.nz)
20556.
Lessons to be learned from PHP (comments.deasil.com)
20557.
Integrating Java and Erlang (theserverside.com)
20558.
When data center cabling becomes art (royal.pingdom.com)
20559.
Shared hosting is not a ghetto (b-list.org)
20560.
Feature: Customize Your Mac with Leopard Power Tweaks (lifehacker.com)
20561.
Why Apple might not be able to get away with it anymore (radar.oreilly.com)
20562.
Analyzing the AI Bot Library from the Quake 3 Source Code (aigamedev.com)
20563.
Twitter is Paying My Rent (marshallk.com)
20564.
250x Faster Ultrabroadband Thrills Australian and US Researchers (theage.com.au)
20565.
Treetop: a syntax analyzer and expression grammar parser in Ruby (treetop.rubyforge.org)
20566.
Cryptography and Chinese Lottery (everything2.com)
20567.
OK, Now This Is A Little Scary: Microsoft Biometrics (techcrunch.com)
20568.
Some Startups Use Digg -- FreshBooks Is Using an RV (centernetworks.com)
20569.
Executives vs Leaders (avc.blogs.com)
20570.
SE Radio: Richard Gabriel on Lisp (se-radio.net)
20571.
Why schools should exclusively use free software (gnu.org)
20572.
How to Create a Time-Lapse Video of any Web Page (labnol.org)
20573.
Article on Etsy and building a community (nytimes.com)
20574.
Venture Capitalists Might be Wary of Economy (cio.com)
20575.
Open source coders rankings (ohloh.net)
20576.
Publish to your site without code- Uses Erlang (webware.com)
20577.
The "R" Word Surfaces: Recesion in the Startup Community? (ventureloop.typepad.com)
20578.
Lean and Mean: operating with less moving parts (fridayreflections.typepad.com)
20579.
JavaScript Genetic Algorithm (icefox.net)
20580.
CIA: Hackers Shook Up Power Grids (blog.wired.com)