July 2011 Archive
4711.
IDA 6.1 Leaked From ESET by a Russian Crew RDW (pastebin.com)
4712.
Why You Should Eliminate Titles at Start-ups (bostonvcblog.typepad.com)
4713.
Craig Walker's Firespotter Labs launches Nosh, a new way to rate and share food. (techcrunch.com)
4714.
Ask HN: More traffic: Mashable Tweet buttons or Mashable mention? (Ongoing) ()
4715.
A short criticism of Amazon SQS (abeautifulview2011.wordpress.com)
4716.
Can we clone extinct animals? (zombal.com)
4717.
Offer HN: I'll help you get stuff done (iainmcqueen.posterous.com)
4718.
Physicists create hole in Time to hide events (blogs.forbes.com)
4719.
Ask HN: Are there any Python or C# tutorials based on projects? ()
4720.
Is Google+ a Jumpino rip off?? (jumpino.com)
4721.
Viral Marketing doesn't need nifty skills (govindtiwari.blogspot.com)
4722.
OSX Lion: Where the flip are my spaces? ()
4723.
Ask HN: Should I used a lexer and parser for this?
4724.
Wolfram launches new document format, meet CDF (zdnet.com)
4725.
Do Authors Dream of Electric Book Signings? (techcrunch.com)
4726.
The perils of bashing an OS you've never used (tuaw.com)
4727.
Top Startup Lessons From Our Main Investor Bill Liao (whiteyboard.tumblr.com)
4728.
Why Brands Will Leave FB for Google+ (And Take Users with Them.) (karlo.org)
4729.
Ask HN: How start doing technical hires? ()
4730.
Unified Field Theory That Nobody Can Disprove (unifiedgravity.com)
4731.
Apple’s eBook Restraint Of Trade Begins (mikecanex.wordpress.com)
4732.
Admit it: environmentalism was an ugly experiment (spiked-online.com)
4733.
Write your passwords down (blog.jgc.org)
4734.
5 Ways In Which Apple’s Designs Changed The World (blog.teambox.com)
4735.
Are you a zombie? (newscientist.com)
4736.
Ask HN: Is HN the online Silicon Valley?, if not where? ()
4737.
Dwolla now issuing cashbacks - reversing earlier policy (tradehillblog.com)
4738.
Good Programmers Make Bad Architects (caffeinatedcoder.com)
4739.
".NET is all about dashboards" or "Where is the open source in .NET"? (bilalaslam.com)
4740.
How to stop cybercrooks: take their pals to court (arstechnica.com)