October 2009 Archive
1681.
Ask HN: Check out my side project (mealfire.com)
1682.
Danny Sullivan: How Link Spammers Killed My Wife’s Web Site (daggle.com)
1683.
SAT Scores And Family Income (businessinsider.com)
1684.
The Book That Contains All Books (online.wsj.com)
1685.
Still on the Job, but Making Only Half as Much (nytimes.com)
1686.
Is it possible to write c...r in lisp, for any combination of letters a and d? ()
1687.
10 Books Every Entrepreneur Should Read (davidcancel.com)
1688.
Microsoft names Visual Studio 2010 dates (theregister.co.uk)
1689.
Is Twitter Successful? (bokardo.com)
1690.
Apple plans to embed ads in operating system (business.rediff.com)
1691.
Where Google Loses: How did Baidu outsmart Google? (foreignpolicy.com)
1692.
Poll: Have you ever comtemplated suicide?
1693.
Be like Panera Bread (victusspiritus.com)
1694.
Ask HN: Image recognition books and resources ()
1695.
Bill to the government the ability to shut down the internet (opencongress.org)
1696.
Chrome OS official build download? (build.chromium.org)
1697.
30 years of failure: the username/password combination (arstechnica.com)
1698.
You Aren't Google or Apple (so don't design your home page like theirs) (blog.kadavy-inc.com)
1699.
Seattle company allows you to rent goat herds to clear brush (treehugger.com)
1700.
Video of Airplane Laser Hitting Truck (singularityhub.com)
1701.
Tell HN: 50% discount on uservoice with code "startup101" (uservoice.com)
1702.
Gemcutter.org as a RubyGem source scares me (stream.btucker.org)
1703.
How to use Windows 7 keyboard shortcuts (computerworlduk.com)
1704.
Are App Stores Evil? (linux-mag.com)
1705.
NASA to pay commercial firms to launch astronauts? (news.bbc.co.uk)
1706.
Enron's system: rank and fire (2001) (time.com)
1707.
AT&T cellular IP reveals iPhone users' location? (techcrunch.com)
1708.
High-definition audio cell phone system deployed in Moldova (forbes.com)
1709.
Citing Cybercrime, FBI Director doesn't bank online (pcworld.idg.com.au)
1710.
Record your every thought and idea, and reference it later at your own leisure (wired.com)