July 2010 Archive
601.
100 million Facebook users (download torrent) (thepiratebay.org)
602.
The Feynman Algorithm (c2.com)
603.
Could Boxes of Water Help Reforest the World? (scientificamerican.com)
604.
How can a website cost £35 million? You’d better ask the government (matthewparsons.net)
605.
There Are No Pictures of iPhone 4 on Google Image Search (google.com)
606.
Zappos Headers (mfli.net)
607.
Six Months Later: Seven Major Websites that Send Passwords Unprotected (blog.adamsmith.cc)
608.
Stack Overflow's new "Web Apps" site is in public beta (webapps.stackexchange.com)
609.
Microsoft changed IronPython, IronRuby and DLR licenses to Apache 2 (ironpython.codeplex.com)
610.
Firefox 4's JägerMonkey JIT status (bailopan.net)
611.
R.I.P. David Blackwell (nytimes.com)
612.
Fake femme fatale shows social network risks (computerworld.com)
613.
The Common Man's Guide to Making Google Page 1 (johnnystartup.com)
614.
Founders at work: Interview with Steve Wozniak (foundersatwork.com)
615.
Writing Rails code makes me miss writing in Objective-C. Or C. Or Java. Or... (sachin.posterous.com)
616.
Ask HN: What's the best feature you've built that no one uses?
617.
Python has a GIL, and lots of complainers (blog.labix.org)
618.
Switching to Android (chadfowler.com)
619.
Our Reddit Ad By The Numbers - Whiteyboard (tinycomb.com)
620.
Is Gravity Real? A Scientist Takes On Newton (nytimes.com)
621.
"Potentially rogue binary" in Sprint Evo (unrevoked.com)
622.
Rust in the bread basket (economist.com)
623.
Google Security Team: Rebooting Responsible Disclosure (googleonlinesecurity.blogspot.com)
624.
NoSQL, Heroku, and You (blog.heroku.com)
625.
From Good to Great: 5 part series on better CSS with Compass and Sass (blog.derekperez.com)
626.
Ten Rules for Web Startups (2005) (evhead.com)
627.
My website similarity search engine (feedback please) (moreofit.com)
628.
Ask HN: Review my startup - Reputely (Game Mechanics Platform) (reputely.com)
629.
Fake Explanations (lesswrong.com)
630.
Robot needs 50 tries to learn how to flip pancakes. (wired.com)