July 2011 Archive
11881.
Tools for bootstrapped startups : Personal Cloud ()
11882.
Zynga IPO Filing Is Out (businessinsider.com)
11883.
Railscasts Moderators (railscasts.com)
11884.
CSS3 Linear Gradients (westciv.com)
11885.
The New York Times Enables In-App Subscriptions For Their iPad And iPhone Apps (macstories.net)
11886.
Zynga files for IPO at $1bn valuation, lists Facebook as its biggest weakness (thenextweb.com)
11887.
US authorities have access to European cloud data (h-online.com)
11888.
Science, Superstars & Stocks: Is Everything Getting Harder? (paul.kedrosky.com)
11889.
New feature: Sort users by most-in-common (overlap.me)
11890.
Onset Launches Environmental Data API for Devices (blog.programmableweb.com)
11891.
EReader: A Library in the Cloud (anamardoll.com)
11892.
Dutch Justice Ministry seeks to kill Internet Anonymity (computerworld.dk)
11893.
Hottest 100 Private Game Companies Ranked by Momentum Index (momentumindex.com)
11894.
Show HN: Facebook fanbase charts (99like.com)
11895.
IRobot Ava Mobile Robotics Platform (irobot.com)
11896.
Why is C++ So Fast? (lingpipe-blog.com)
11897.
Oracle buys CEO Ellison's company (online.wsj.com)
11898.
Study: Age-old understanding of static electricity is incorrect (popularmechanics.com)
11899.
Droid X2 easily reaches 110 degrees (geek.com)
11900.
Navigating the Sales Tax "Minefield" of "Cloud Computing" (accountingweb.com)
11901.
Code Soloist: Stop Spending Money (danielcrenna.com)
11902.
The Superstar Advantage (wired.com)
11903.
Praxis: Entrepreneurship for the Common Good (qideas.org)
11904.
Made by HP in California (instagr.am)
11905.
6,000 Nortel patents go to Microsoft, Apple, EMC, Oracle, RIM, Ericsson (thestreet.com)
11906.
Video games and kids: How young is too young? (cnn.com)
11907.
Tool of the Day: Proposable: Proposals in Real Time (usefultools.com)
11908.
Researchers map the physics of Tibetan singing bowls (physorg.com)
11909.
Virtual People Watching Virtual Movies In Virtual Space – Recursively Delicious (singularityhub.com)
11910.
American publishers say Richard Wiseman's latest book is too skeptical. (richardwiseman.wordpress.com)