November 2010 Archive
3721.
4-year-old Zynga has higher valuation than game leader EA (nypost.com)
3722.
Man takes computer in for repair. Cost: $20 million (thestar.com)
3723.
Nevercookie Eats Evercookie With New Firefox Plugin (securityweek.com)
3724.
Henrik Ståhl: reiterating Oracle's JVM Strategy (blogs.oracle.com)
3725.
Analyst: Android grows 628 percent year-over-year for third quarter (androidcentral.com)
3726.
3D printing and "Intellectual Property" (blog.reprap.org)
3727.
Samsung Galaxy Tab Review: A Pocketable Train Wreck (gizmodo.com)
3728.
Five Pervasive Myths About Older Software Developers (lessonsoffailure.com)
3729.
Decoding the Value of Computer Science (chronicle.com)
3730.
Over 35 Hours of Video Uploaded Every Minute to YouTube (youtube-global.blogspot.com)
3731.
This Week's Wave Protocol Summit: Updates (googlewavedev.blogspot.com)
3732.
The Missing Middle In The Senate (macdougherty.com)
3733.
Django 1.3 alpha 1 released (djangoproject.com)
3734.
Photo Sharing on the Go Is the Latest Hot Investment Niche (nytimes.com)
3735.
P vs NP - an overview and explanation. (penzba.co.uk)
3736.
Building a Django App Server with Chef: Part 4 (ericholscher.com)
3737.
It's murder every day in the Old Bailey (business.timesonline.co.uk)
3738.
For Sale: A $160,000 Apple Computer (bits.blogs.nytimes.com)
3739.
The old scientific powers are staring to lose their grip (economist.com)
3740.
11 of 20 richest women entrepreneurs from China (businessinsider.com)
3741.
Tea with Paul Graham (audio interview) (cinchcast.com)
3742.
Has this Tiny Indonesian Company Pushed Google into the Market Faster? (techcrunch.com)
3743.
Structure and Interpretation of Computer Programs (mitpress.mit.edu)
3744.
A pizza with Randal Schwartz (h3rald.com)
3745.
Internet Quarantines (schneier.com)
3746.
Facebook Titan, is not so hot. (blue74.com)
3747.
The arguments Argument -- still the best JS podcast (aminutewithbrendan.com)
3748.
The Underlying Technology of Facebook Messages (facebook.com)
3749.
How I build mockups (ashmaurya.com)
3750.
Mark Twain's autobiography, released 100 years after his death (npr.org)