April 2011 Archive
1531.
Facebook Deals: Better with Friends (blog.facebook.com)
1532.
Joi Ito: What World of Warcraft taught me about being a better leader (chronicle.com)
1533.
New experimental APIs for Chrome extensions (blog.chromium.org)
1534.
Seedcamp: A Global Answer To Y Combinator (blogs.forbes.com)
1535.
JS/CSS Packaging to Minimize Requests and Randomly Evil Algorithms (bjk5.com)
1536.
Breaking Google's map monopoly: Fast custom open source maps with node (radar.oreilly.com)
1537.
Peter Thiel explains his own opinions (nationalreview.com)
1538.
COLOURlovers Goes Colorless for April Fools (colourlovers.com)
1539.
What Android Users Really Think of Apple. (qrious.ly)
1540.
Local markets benefit from fragmentation (ownlocal.com)
1541.
Why IEEE Fellow Radia Perlman hates technology (itworld.com)
1542.
Faster, ligher JS library: üjs (üjs.com)
1543.
Quantum Man - Richard Feynman’s Life in Science (nytimes.com)
1544.
Google Makes $900 Million Stalking-Horse Bid For Nortel Patents (techcrunch.com)
1545.
Piet: programming with pixels (dangermouse.net)
1546.
Justin Kan: Apps I've been using this year (areallybadidea.com)
1547.
Grooveshark's open letter to the music industry (inc. Google and Apple) (digitalmusicnews.com)
1548.
Ask HN: How has the Amazon AWS outage affected you?
1549.
Show HN: Review my project: Git Code Press, blogging via git (gitcp.com)
1550.
Fork our new album on Github (thebristol7s.wordpress.com)
1551.
0.01% of Wikipedia as a printed book (labnol.org)
1552.
The Economist magazine pension issue (blogs.law.harvard.edu)
1553.
But You're too Old to do a Startup (jeremyhamel.posterous.com)
1554.
Trinity: Microsoft Research’s Hypergraph Database (infoq.com)
1555.
An introduction to static site generators (mickgardner.com)
1556.
IO evaluates the Haskell heap : in pictures (blog.ezyang.com)
1557.
There's an intern for that (internstore.com)
1558.
Why Apple shares are dirt cheap (tech.fortune.cnn.com)
1559.
Largest Email Marketing Firm, Epsilon Hacked. Big Name Customers Exposed. (securityweek.com)
1560.
The Management Myth: Want to succeed in business? Study philosophy (theatlantic.com)