July 2010 Archive
931.
Ask HN: interested in a SF East Bay HN meetup? ()
932.
What Social Skills I Learn From The HN Community (lifeasparesh.co.cc)
933.
Remember When We Were All Supposed To Quit Facebook? (techcrunch.com)
934.
What if TV Networks Aired All Their Pilots? (freakonomics.blogs.nytimes.com)
935.
Kindle now available on woot.com for $149.99 (woot.com)
936.
Intel Paid Dell $4.3 Billion to Pad Earnings From 2003 to 2006 (nytimes.com)
937.
Starfish Prime, outer space nuclear test (en.wikipedia.org)
938.
Mac Interface Design (mac.appstorm.net)
939.
Your high IQ will kill your startup (maxkle.in)
940.
Recruiters can't tell great programmers and flakes apart [comic] (blog.codeboff.in)
941.
ActiveSupport Considered Harmful (hayesdavis.net)
942.
The Sad State of Open Source in Android Tablets (projectgus.com)
943.
IBM Makes Firefox its Default Browser (readwriteweb.com)
944.
Evolution of Web design (cssmysite.com)
945.
Thoughts on Domain Acquisition and Branding using AI (simplyryan.com)
946.
High Frequency Trading "Quote Stuffing" Visualized (zerohedge.com)
947.
Python at Google (2006) (panela.blog-city.com)
948.
Difference between F5, Control F5, Click+Reload in various browsers (stackoverflow.com)
949.
We're happier when busy but our instinct is for idleness (bps-research-digest.blogspot.com)
950.
Dave McClure's Investment Thesis (avc.com)
951.
Genetic algorithms in Python, a tutorial (acodersmusings.blogspot.com)
952.
Physicists Dream Up the Antilaser (wired.com)
953.
Air France Concorde Crash - 10 Years Later (jmarbach.com)
954.
Conway: During The Bubble, 77% Entrepreneurs Failed. Now, It’s Around 40% (techcrunch.com)
955.
Anonymouse and k-anonymity (blog.rapleaf.com)
956.
Ask HN: Why are there so few apps being built with JSP?
957.
Stack Overflow: Defend PHP - convince me it isn't horrible (stackoverflow.com)
958.
Jefferson changed 'subjects' to 'citizens' in Declaration of Independence (washingtonpost.com)
959.
Amazon sold 143 Kindle books for every 100 hardcover books last quarter (nytimes.com)
960.
Crack the Code in Cyber Command's Logo (wired.com)