July 2009 Archive
3001.
Ask HN: Was your first crazy startup idea anything like your current one? ()
3002.
Evidence Based Scheduling (joelonsoftware.com)
3003.
The Art Of Applying Rule Of Five Plus Or Minus Two For An Effective Wireframe (onextrapixel.com)
3004.
Ask YC: Lamson Project Versus Boogie Tools for Email Bounce Detection ()
3005.
The Boss Who Laid Himself Off (blogs.harvardbusiness.org)
3006.
Unraveling how children become bilingual so easily (news.yahoo.com)
3007.
Thirty Meter Telescope to be built in Hawaii (tmt.org)
3008.
A tool to make online personal data vanish (physorg.com)
3009.
Do you believe in magic? (gilesbowkett.blogspot.com)
3010.
Managing Your Digital Comics Colllection (getitdownonpaper.com)
3011.
Skype releases a plug-and-play super-wideband audio headset (share.skype.com)
3012.
Happy PI approximation day (in Common Lisp) (jng.imagine27.com)
3013.
Here’s Why Amazon Bought Zappos (mashable.com)
3014.
Voice to text service is actually humans live transcribing messages (news.bbc.co.uk)
3015.
Mapping Drug Use by Testing Sewer Water (schneier.com)
3016.
Ask HN: To "Cloud" or not to "Cloud"? (Webapp Hosting) ()
3017.
PHP is now on Github (github.com)
3018.
Mice made from induced stem cells (nature.com)
3019.
Issues with Co-working spaces: The example of Portland, OR (webworkerdaily.com)
3020.
'Shanghai to promote two-child families' (timesofindia.indiatimes.com)
3021.
A Market for Lemons, a Nobel Prize, and Snake Oil SEO (johnon.com)
3022.
Vi vs. Dvorak (stephenmann.net)
3023.
CPS based functional references (twan.home.fmf.nl)
3024.
AT&T Blocks 4Chan(confirmed) This Is Going To Get Ugly. (techcrunch.com)
3025.
The Future of Firefox and Why It Matters (curiousinsanity.blogspot.com)
3026.
AI Driven startup gazaro, find deals on Computers and Electronics (gazaro.com)
3027.
Beware: The Stack Overflow King is bored (authenticbattledamage.blogspot.com)
3028.
The Development of the C Language (cm.bell-labs.com)
3029.
$50M later, SearchMe redirects to Google (searchme.com)
3030.
Stanford students' invention could revolutionize the way diseases are diagnosed (news.stanford.edu)