October 2008 Archive
2821.
Erlang Makes Money go Round (skillsmatter.com)
2822.
Why Would a Software Geek Make a Physical Product? (geekstack.com)
2823.
Goodbye, old 500 page. (carsonified.com)
2824.
7 Real Reasons Why iPhone Is a Smash Hit (gigaom.com)
2825.
The Rackspace Cloud Event (rackspacecloudevent.com)
2826.
Top Ten Android Launch Apps (techcrunch.com)
2827.
Assumptions, Drizzle (krow.livejournal.com)
2828.
Rumor: Imeem Laying Off Staff and Looking for an Exit (Updated) (readwriteweb.com)
2829.
Writing a simple expert system in Prolog (docs.google.com)
2830.
Bill Gates’ mysterious new “think tank”: bgC3 (crunchgear.com)
2831.
Would the Last Honest Reporter Please Turn On the Lights? (ldsmag.com)
2832.
Starting up: London vs. Seattle (ft.com)
2833.
How Raising Angel Money Can Hurt Your Odds With VCs (markpeterdavis.com)
2834.
Linux Kernel Surpasses 10 Million Lines of Code (heise-online.co.uk)
2835.
What is the culture of the cloud? (kk.org)
2836.
Nassim Nicholas Taleb and Benoit Mandelbrot on the Credit Crisis (Video) (pbs.org)
2837.
Some Facebook Secrets for Better Operations (highscalability.com)
2838.
Typocalypse: what every font subliminally says (flickr.com)
2839.
Weblogs, Inc. Three Years Later: Impressive Page View And Revenue Growth (techcrunch.com)
2840.
Ex-Cisco SVP to Lead Andy Bechtolsheim’s Latest Switch Startup (gigaom.com)
2841.
Social Web Usage Tipped in 2008 (readwriteweb.com)
2842.
TechCrunch on Racespace Acquisitions (techcrunch.com)
2843.
The Cloud Is Shaping Up. Amazon Beefs Up EC2, Bechtolsheim Shifts His Attention To Arista (techcrunchit.com)
2844.
Tomboy now in Mac and Windows (automorphic.blogspot.com)
2845.
Recreating Linux Fedora 9 Would Cost 10.8 Billion (linuxfoundation.org)
2846.
Mythbusting: Ideas Do Not Spread Because they are Good (danzarrella.com)
2847.
The Importance of Writing Tools (justin.harmonize.fm)
2848.
Banks mine data & woo troubled borrowers (nytimes.com)
2849.
Model-View-Controller Considered Harmful (lispy.wordpress.com)
2850.
Surveillance technology: If looks could kill (economist.com)