November 2011 Archive
8941.
Vivid, purveyor of Adult Films, claims HTC Vivid infringes upon their trademark (edibleapple.com)
8942.
Two Monks and a Woman (janineshepherd.com)
8943.
The Educational Lottery (lareviewofbooks.org)
8944.
Stop Online Piracy Act: Infographic (mashable.com)
8945.
Rogie King talks about UI design and Mad Mimi on the Talentopoly Podcast (podcast.talentopoly.com)
8946.
Geo APIs are moving beyond infrastructure and onto the fun stuff (siliconangle.com)
8947.
Ask HN: Effect of SOPA on non-US people ()
8948.
Designing to Reveal the Nature of the Universe (the-witness.net)
8949.
Stardock is free from Impulse. Sins now available on Steam (gaming.icrontic.com)
8950.
Problems with Project Skyway (startribune.com)
8951.
Help me find an appropriate ruby/python parser generator (stackoverflow.com)
8952.
The design and copywriting opportunity on a lowly cash register receipt (reillybrennan.com)
8953.
How To Find A Mentor (forbes.com)
8954.
Physicists create light out of nothing (abc.net.au)
8955.
Linux loses its luster as a darling among developers (computerworld.com)
8956.
Backify To Good To Be True (lifehacker.com)
8957.
I Save $20,000 A Year By Couch Surfing (businessinsider.com)
8958.
Codecasting ― using Mozilla popcorn.js to explain code (s-anand.net)
8959.
Are Digital Resale Markets Legal? Should They Be? (digitopoly.org)
8960.
Cliodynamics (cliodynamics.info)
8961.
The Industry - Thoughts on Flash (thefwa.com)
8962.
Vim for Rails developers: Lazy modern configuration (lucapette.com)
8963.
Google Music Goes Live in US, Challenge to Apple's iTunes (sociableblog.com)
8964.
How SORM - Russian SOPA - works since 2000 (Russian language) (m.habrahabr.ru)
8965.
U.S. military better prepared for cyber warfare: general (reuters.com)
8966.
Fedora 16: A GNOME lover's paradise (theregister.co.uk)
8967.
Who coordinated the raids? (riverdaughter.wordpress.com)
8968.
Chief Sponsor Wavers on Web Censorship Bill in Charged Hearing (wired.com)
8969.
Google Scholar Citations Open To All (googlescholar.blogspot.com)
8970.
The end of the dedicated portable device (asymco.com)