March 2012 Archive
571.
Matt Cutts: One of the more fun gadgets I've been playing with lately… (plus.google.com)
572.
Optimizing Solr (Or How To 7x Your Search Speed) (carsabi.com)
573.
Brian Kernighan's new book: D is for Digital (kernighan.com)
574.
HNHiring.me: A pleasant interface for the monthly hiring posts (hnhiring.me)
575.
The Proof Is Trivial (theproofistrivial.com)
576.
Lets Talk About Something Diabolical: A PyPy Intro (David Beazley PyCon keynote) (pyvideo.org)
577.
How Three Germans Are Cloning the Web (businessweek.com)
578.
Lunch, disrupted: ZeroCater helps startups get fed (gigaom.com)
579.
Assange 'to run for Australian senate' (aljazeera.com)
580.
Python becomes a platform. Thoughts on the release of clojure-py. (khinsen.wordpress.com)
581.
Amazon Data Center: 450,000 Estimated EC2 Servers (huanliu.wordpress.com)
582.
Announcing the jQuery Foundation (blog.jquery.com)
583.
DNS Changer (circleid.com)
584.
Why does changing 0.1f to 0 slow down performance by 10x? (stackoverflow.com)
585.
European Parliament Blocks Copyright Reform With 113% Voter Turnout (falkvinge.net)
586.
Cleo: the open source technology behind LinkedIn's typeahead search (engineering.linkedin.com)
587.
Why software sucks? (scottberkun.com)
588.
Poll: What are your prime hacking hours?
589.
Lthread - C coroutine lib with multicore support (github.com)
590.
What Happens When You Piss Off the Internet (bufr.tumblr.com)
591.
Learning from competition (marco.org)
592.
LG begins mass production of first flexible e-ink displays (extremetech.com)
593.
What I hate about “beginner” programming books (allfuzzy.tumblr.com)
594.
The Missing 20th Century: How copyright protection makes books vanish (theatlantic.com)
595.
SpaceX Prepares For April 30 Launch To Space Station (wired.com)
596.
Researchers Band Together To Force Science Journals To Open Access (singularityhub.com)
597.
Cybersecurity Bill Broad Enough to Use Against WikiLeaks and The Pirate Bay (eff.org)
598.
How India Became America (nytimes.com)
599.
Minix 3.2.0: One step closer to the promise of highly reliable OS (groups.google.com)
600.
Why was Tanenbaum wrong in the Tanenbaum-Torvalds debates? (programmers.stackexchange.com)