July 2011 Archive
6121.
Twitter Acquires Social Analytics Startup Backtype (YC08) (techcrunch.com)
6122.
Data Portability Wars : Google and Facebook vs. YOU (dataportability.org)
6123.
Apple is killing the WWW? Hahahaha (cio.com)
6124.
Hackers Select a New Target: Other Hackers (nytimes.com)
6125.
Why companies must incubate (francis-moran.com)
6126.
Hackers need to learn powerpoint? (richde.wordpress.com)
6127.
Open Robotics (blog.law.cornell.edu)
6128.
PyPy can be faster than NumPy (technicaldiscovery.blogspot.com)
6129.
Canonical Launches Android App For "Ubuntu One" Cloud Storage (digitizor.com)
6130.
Google, Yelp and Why Review Counts are Meaningless (smallbusinesssem.com)
6131.
Make Food Choices Simple: Cook (opinionator.blogs.nytimes.com)
6132.
SimuPOP - a general-purpose genetics simulation environment in Python (simupop.sourceforge.net)
6133.
Where in the World Are Google Plus Beta Testers? (Map) (readwriteweb.com)
6134.
LulzSec's Top 3 Hacking Tools Deconstructed (informationweek.com)
6135.
Android Background Threads: AsyncTask versus ServiceIntent (programmingmobile.com)
6136.
KISSmetrics Now Analyze Your Users’ Browsing Habits — Before They Even Sign Up (techcrunch.com)
6137.
Inspired by Fabrice's browser PC: an HTML5 Apple 2 emulator (w/ WebGL graphics) (porkrind.org)
6138.
From Six Figures to Suitcase (lifeaftercollege.org)
6139.
Group texting is a Telco game (gcrawshaw.posterous.com)
6140.
The Monad Reader - Issue 18 (themonadreader.wordpress.com)
6141.
A Horde of 4.5 Million Zombie Computers Is Marching Towards You (singularityhub.com)
6142.
Google (en.wikipedia.org)
6143.
The Calm After The Storm (Bitcoin) (bitcoinweekly.com)
6144.
How to be Creative. Hugh MacLeod (gapingvoid.com)
6145.
NATO Server Hacked by 1337day Inj3ct0r and Backup Leaked (thehackernews.com)
6146.
Do you Have to be Rich to be Honest? (jamesaltucher.com)
6147.
How do people evaluate a website's credibility? (consumerwebwatch.org)
6148.
No country for old hackers (garann.com)
6149.
Jason Fried: How to get creative (inc.com)
6150.
Usability testing on the cheap: The TED.com example (intuitionhq.com)