May 2008 Archive
2311.
Microsoft Should Know Money Can’t Buy Love (bits.blogs.nytimes.com)
2312.
Double your salary - without a second job (menshealth.com)
2313.
Powerlist: A Structure for Parallel Recursion (citeseer.ist.psu.edu)
2314.
Predicting Whether You Need to Reply to an Email (gaborcselle.com)
2315.
Shattering the Conventional Wisdom on Growing Inequality (freakonomics.blogs.nytimes.com)
2316.
Web 2.0 fails to produce cash (ft.com)
2317.
The Birth of a Virus, In Pictures (blog.wired.com)
2318.
Kleiner's Pick for the Killer iPhone App (businessweek.com)
2319.
10 Coaches That Could Be Exceptional CEOs (hrworld.com)
2320.
Ruby EventMachine - the speed demon! (igvita.com)
2321.
Announcing Pragmatic Screencasts (clarkware.com)
2322.
Ask Pg: what's your view on copyright laws? ()
2323.
Feedback for your Boss ()
2324.
3rd Annual Web 2.0 Awards - Multiple Y Combinator Winners (seomoz.org)
2325.
What Friendfeed’s “MicroMeme” Means For You, Brands, and The Web (web-strategist.com)
2326.
How the Semantic Web Will & Won't Work (socialstrategist.com)
2327.
Leaked Screen Shots of Windows 7 Hit CrunchGear’s Inbox (techcrunch.com)
2328.
The fbOpen Initiative: Facebook Confirms Plans to Open-Source Its Platform (techcrunch.com)
2329.
'Biggest drawing in world' revealed as hoax (telegraph.co.uk)
2330.
Computer scientists devise a 'P4P' system for efficient Internet usage (physorg.com)
2331.
Redundancy vs dependencies: which is worse? (yosefk.com)
2332.
No API? You suck. (feld.com)
2333.
Microsoft demonstrates Multi-touch (windowsvistablog.com)
2334.
D6: Bill Gates and Steve Ballmer Highlight Reel, Part One (video) (d6.allthingsd.com)
2335.
A Day With Heroku: Building a Simple Color Crowdsourcing App (neverreadpassively.com)
2336.
D6: Bill Gates and Steve Ballmer Highlight Reel, Part Two (video) (d6.allthingsd.com)
2337.
The offline cost of an online life. (news.bbc.co.uk)
2338.
The Rich Get Hungrier (nytimes.com)
2339.
Four Reasons Why The Internet Can’t Kill Cable TV (Yet) (fourreasonswhy.com)
2340.
DNA Sequence Alignment Algorithms: Needleman Wunsch and Smith Waterman (codeodor.com)