September 2009 Archive
1261.
Immigrant founder of indee.tv stuck in Vancouver due to visa hassle (sharanreddy.com)
1262.
Why education is about more than jobs (lizw.livejournal.com)
1263.
Intel to port Silverlight to Linux (blogs.zdnet.com)
1264.
Windows 7 - $30 For Students (crn.com)
1265.
Google Wave: There Will Be Backlash (techcrunch.com)
1266.
Metrorail Crash May Exemplify Automation Paradox (washingtonpost.com)
1267.
ArsDigita: From Start-Up to Bust-Up (2001) (waxy.org)
1268.
Why you should use four different digits for keypad locks (alicebobandmallory.com)
1269.
Ask YC: What are some good example of microrewards on websites? (trendpreneur.com)
1270.
Electric bike that folds into a shoulder bag (engadget.com)
1271.
FanGamb: Gamble + Fantasy Football (fangamb.com)
1272.
Steps Towards an Acceptable Lisp (pwpwp.blogspot.com)
1273.
Fred Wilson: Startup Visas (avc.com)
1274.
Zune HD features Apple should steal (news.cnet.com)
1275.
Google Is Searching For Beautiful Minds at MIT (techcrunch.com)
1276.
Call for more babies as China turns to grey (timesonline.co.uk)
1277.
Do dysfunctional families breed entrepreneurs? (entrepreneur.venturebeat.com)
1278.
A/B and Qualitative User Testing (blog.slicedbreaddesign.com)
1279.
5 Financial Rules for Startups (businessinsider.com)
1280.
Mint.com Founder: Heck No, My VCs Didn't Force Me To Sell To Intuit (businessinsider.com)
1281.
Our Craigslist (by Khoi Vinh) (subtraction.com)
1282.
Chandrayaan sends images of Apollo 15 landing (timesofindia.indiatimes.com)
1283.
50 things that are being killed by the internet (telegraph.co.uk)
1284.
Doubt, Worry and Fear: New York Faces Dramatic Consequences of Crisis (spiegel.de)
1285.
Google praises Microsoft's HTML 5 contribution (programmica.info)
1286.
The Presidential Records Act of 1978 meets web-based social media of 2009 (whitehouse.gov)
1287.
Are You Ready for Open-Source Hardware? (gigaom.com)
1288.
Extropy by Kevin Kelly (kk.org)
1289.
Why People think Computers Can't by Marvin Minsky (1982) (kbsc.com)
1290.
10 TechCruch50 grads: Where are they now? (news.cnet.com)