July 2010 Archive
901.
The pursuit of excellence in programming (programmingzen.com)
902.
Use a Fictional Tony to Maintain Customer Relationships, and Get Money Faster (blog.makeleaps.com)
903.
Brilliance of Haskell's Maybe type and the Value of Static Type Checking (moreindirection.blogspot.com)
904.
An iPhone App Market That Doesn't Require Jailbreaking... Which Apple Can't Stop (techdirt.com)
905.
Root DNS Zone Now DNSSEC Signed (isc.org)
906.
Concurrency's shysters (dtrace.org)
907.
Apple's condescending iPhone 4 press conference. (slate.com)
908.
Zuckerberg's Rent-A-Coder profile from 2002 (rentacoder.com)
909.
Ask HN: How much do you program? ()
910.
Turn Your Blog Into An iPad Native With PadPressed (techcrunch.com)
911.
Ask HN: Review Cash Curve, our free webapp. (cashcurveapp.com)
912.
What does this code do? (johndcook.com)
913.
Bryan Cantrill, co-inventor of DTrace, leaving Sun (dtrace.org)
914.
Riak 0.12 Released (downloads.basho.com)
915.
Social Status and the Malleability of Personality (zacharyburt.com)
916.
Bye-Bye, Batteries - Radio Waves as a Low-Power Source (nytimes.com)
917.
How I Launched My MVP, Reputely, on HN (startupi.st)
918.
The Lost Tribes of RadioShack (wired.com)
919.
Non-blocking IO isn't necessarily faster (at least in Java) [pdf] (mailinator.com)
920.
On the enforceability of laws (sealedabstract.com)
921.
Quant Based Marketing for Start Ups (okdork.com)
922.
Rosetta Code : similar programs written in various languages (rosettacode.org)
923.
Hookbox: Real-time Web with WebSocket/Comet and Webhooks (cometdaily.com)
924.
The Story Of Groupon: From Failure To An Industry-Changing, Profit Machine (mixergy.com)
925.
Those niggling last little bits of a project (jacquesmattheij.com)
926.
Mixpanel (YCS09) - How Real-Time Data is Changing Business Optimization (mashable.com)
927.
ZumoCast Is Like Cloud Storage Without The Cloud, Or The Cost (techcrunch.com)
928.
Blizzard/Activision Removing Anonymity From Game Forums (mmo-champion.com)
929.
IT Crowd (youtube.com)
930.
Okay, kids, play on my lawn (Roger Ebert responds re: video games and art) (blogs.suntimes.com)