June 2008 Archive
3331.
It's Official: Facebook Not Worth $15 Billion (alleyinsider.com)
3332.
'Browser' rule of thumb (twitter.com)
3333.
Logistics are in vogue with designers (online.wsj.com)
3334.
Google Media Server (desktop.google.com)
3335.
Google Goes After the TV with Google Media Server (techcrunch.com)
3336.
Rails: Helpers vs. Partials - A Performance Question (viget.com)
3337.
Audio: Bill Gates says so long to Microsoft (blog.seattlepi.nwsource.com)
3338.
EMI Music Sues Hi5, VideoEgg and Ten Defendants To Be Named Later (techcrunch.com)
3339.
Firefox 3 already rules the roost (pcpro.co.uk)
3340.
Why No One Will Replace Bill & Steve (gigaom.com)
3341.
Hollywood's 3-D Cinema Dreams (portfolio.com)
3342.
US Air Force Militarizes Cyberspace, Seeking Control Over All Networked Computing Devices, Worldwide (atimes.com)
3343.
Google Plays With Your Living Room TV (bits.blogs.nytimes.com)
3344.
Draw excelent pictures by writing javascript (azarask.in)
3345.
I Could Tell You but Then You Would Have to Be Destroyed by Me [CSPAN - vid] (c-spanarchives.org)
3346.
Why You Need to Worry About Web Standards, and Why Your Client Won’t (webdevlounge.com)
3347.
Rails and Seaside, Sweaters and Space suits (gilesbowkett.blogspot.com)
3348.
Overclocking Tool for the Mac Pro (macrumors.com)
3349.
Run when someone says to think outside the box (blogs.jobdig.com)
3350.
Evidence of life on the early Earth might be found in meteorites on the moon (space.com)
3351.
Rails 10x more productive, Scala 2x. Really? (adams.id.au)
3352.
Envisioning the “viral” in viral marketing (laserlike.com)
3353.
Five Reasons The Intel-Microsoft Duopoly Is Dead (crn.com)
3354.
How Facebook Stores 540 Terabytes of Photos (insidefacebook.com)
3355.
Pioneer in the field of global outsourcing (sfgate.com)
3356.
Epic Fail, or, why the users hate us. (avdi.org)
3357.
Google Cloud At Work For NSF, Academia (gigaom.com)
3358.
Hall of Shame Craigslist Ads for Programmers (realm3.com)
3359.
Half a Century of Crappy Computing (rebelscience.blogspot.com)
3360.
Massachusetts is the most tech savvy state, again (tech.yahoo.com)