October 2009 Archive
6091.
University Funds Report Steep Investment Losses (nytimes.com)
6092.
Can India's economy overtake China? (news.bbc.co.uk)
6093.
We have the First Game Play Concepts and our First Game Build (zombieexperiment.com)
6094.
Banking: Where transparency is the best policy (guardian.co.uk)
6095.
Startups flock to Twitter (boston.com)
6096.
Native Client in Chrome: Google flexes Web muscle (news.cnet.com)
6097.
Vreebit: social networking, by no toad (web-poet.com)
6098.
IEEE Spectrum: How to Beat Information Overload (spectrum.ieee.org)
6099.
The Secret to Github at work (alephnullplex.appspot.com)
6100.
Introducing iMessenger. The first real iPhone to iPhone messaging client. (imessengerapp.com)
6101.
Injunction by Twitter: Stopping a Web Impostor (time.com)
6102.
Small pieces, loosely joined by machine tags (adactio.com)
6103.
Algebraic Surfaces Gallery (freigeist.cc)
6104.
Wine worries? Worry no more (winetaylor.com)
6105.
Sloppy Linux Admins Enable Slow Bruteforce Attacks (bsdly.blogspot.com)
6106.
Minipng, a web based png crusher (jasonmillerdesign.com)
6107.
What programming language should be learned first? (strchr.com)
6108.
Just 30% Say U.S. Will Be Most Powerful Nation At End of Century (rasmussenreports.com)
6109.
Information-Theoretic Incompleteness (free ebook) [pdf] (umcs.maine.edu)
6110.
Notes from Peter Thiel’s Singularity Summit Talk (2009) (leveragingideas.com)
6111.
Porting Syck to JRuby: Where did all the performance go? (olabini.com)
6112.
Future of Music Summit: 115,000 Albums Released This Year and Only 110 Hits. (leisureblogs.chicagotribune.com)
6113.
Adobe pushes Flash video on mobile devices (news.cnet.com)
6114.
Clear Voice of Bush’s Pentagon Becomes Harder to Hear (nytimes.com)
6115.
Why Do Women Have Sex? An Interview. (salon.com)
6116.
Difference Between Geeks and Nerds (devtopics.com)
6117.
How does our world work when the mundane succeeds so rarely? (krazykoding.com)
6118.
DELAY command implemented as batch file (Windows) (commonsense4commonpeople.net)
6119.
Paul Krugman makes no cents (nypost.com)
6120.
An estimated 5.8% of all people ever born are alive today (prb.org)