March 2011 Archive
1081.
Hacker Monthly April 2011 Issue (hackermonthly.com)
1082.
Xcode 4 released (developer.apple.com)
1083.
Safari/Mac OS X first to fall at pwn2own (zdnet.com)
1084.
Github reviews as a way to improve code quality? (antirez.com)
1085.
Those Gray Beard Hackers And Their Tall Stories (jacquesmattheij.com)
1086.
AnyLeaf (YC S10) — Putting an End to the Old Supermarket Circular (xconomy.com)
1087.
Support The Victims of Japan's Earthquake With Your Loose Change (blog.swipegood.com)
1088.
Want to back an entrepreneur? Best bet is to go for old (thenational.ae)
1089.
Traffic stats from a #2 post on Hacker News + Viral Loop (blog.receivd.com)
1090.
What were the key decisions that Page & Brin made in the early days of Google? (quora.com)
1091.
TeX Is Great, What Is TeX? (rjlipton.wordpress.com)
1092.
Junkyard Jumbotron: join all your screens into one big one, no software needed (boingboing.net)
1093.
The Smart Guide to Beating Procrastination (steve-olson.com)
1094.
Rails 3.0.5 broke my routes and kicked my dog (matthew.mceachen.us)
1095.
What are some warning signs to look for when dealing with VC firms? (quora.com)
1096.
Scala at Twitter (infoq.com)
1097.
All 1,926 public school teachers in Providence fired (projo.com)
1098.
The War For Talent (avc.com)
1099.
Deaths per TWh for all energy sources: Rooftop solar power relatively dangerous (nextbigfuture.com)
1100.
Dynamic languages are static languages (existentialtype.wordpress.com)
1101.
How long is Last.fm gonna last? (thenextweb.com)
1102.
The Ghetto Called Facebook (pcmag.com)
1103.
The Rolodex Logo Shock (imjustcreative.com)
1104.
The Wage Struggles of Men (economix.blogs.nytimes.com)
1105.
Kids are making friends in the Arab world - via Call of Duty (scottbraddock.com)
1106.
The Pragmatic Programmer (hn-books.com)
1107.
What distinguishes a good software engineer from a great one? (quora.com)
1108.
Where Apple went wrong with free apps (manton.org)
1109.
How not to interact with the media - Hashable CEO (spiers.tumblr.com)
1110.
IPv4 addresses are becoming valuable (blog.internetgovernance.org)