April 2008 Archive
2671.
Startup idea: high-volume email client ()
2672.
Java Will Never Be A Mobile Platform - Thoughts On Nokia, iPhone, and it’s Murderer (brandonwerner.com)
2673.
"Top-quality" sperm is going for $3k/vial? (loveatmadisonandwall.com)
2674.
"Don't fight the internet." (radar.oreilly.com)
2675.
In the valley for startup school? Check out SHDH (groups.google.com)
2676.
Twitter: This Space For Rent? (zetetic.net)
2677.
Tribute to honor Jim Gray (eecs.berkeley.edu)
2678.
Bidding On A Twitter Account: Insanity or Efficient Market? (onstartups.com)
2679.
100-Plus Tips and Resources to Become an Authority Site in Your Niche (insidecrm.com)
2680.
Wondering Which Partner at a VC Firm to Pitch? TheFunded Now Breaks Out Individual VC Ratings. (techcrunch.com)
2681.
The many faces of data portability (ungeekdapo.wordpress.com)
2682.
Technology driving motorists to distraction (msnbc.msn.com)
2683.
The Baton Passes to Asia (nytimes.com)
2684.
Microsoft's new weapon against open source: stupidity (opensource.org)
2685.
Unix Timeline (levenez.com)
2686.
Using a hash property for security and caching (ajaxian.com)
2687.
NPR interviews Bram Cohen of BitTorrent fame. (bramcohen.livejournal.com)
2688.
Startups pay attention: Announcing Ruby on Crack (antoniocangiano.com)
2689.
Sharing My Location Just the Way I Like It (radar.oreilly.com)
2690.
Build Your Very Own Google Airplane (techcrunch.com)
2691.
Anil Dash: Your April Fool's Day Joke Continues to Suck (dashes.com)
2692.
Adobe AIR alpha unleashed for Linux (arstechnica.com)
2693.
What's keeping us from Mars? Space rays, say experts (reuters.com)
2694.
Web 3.0 belongs to those who control personal profile infrastructure (news.com)
2695.
Programmers: Work from your home office. (artlogic.com)
2696.
Happy Birthday, Apple (tuaw.com)
2697.
Microsoft Stands Firm On Yahoo Offer: “There Is No Reason To Bid Against Ourselves.” (techcrunch.com)
2698.
Blog Comments Still Matter (readwriteweb.com)
2699.
Use context in Gnome Do (or Quicksilver) to improve results (ericholscher.com)
2700.
A large but unknowable proportion of businesses fail pursuing nearly perfect strategies (boxesandarrows.com)