June 2012 Archive
1951.
You can no longer afford not to take Git seriously (jamesmckay.net)
1952.
55-to-64 demographic now boasts the highest rate of entrepreneurship in the US (washingtonpost.com)
1953.
Ask HN: How to reward beta testers? ()
1954.
Do YC companies use Arc? ()
1955.
Study Finds Female-Name Chat Users Get 25 Times More Malicious Messages (ece.umd.edu)
1956.
AMA Request: Paul Graham ()
1957.
Lessons Learned: First 6 Months Running a Software Consultancy (reefpoints.dockyard.com)
1958.
Thanks, but No Thanks: Passing on an 8 Figure Venture Round (3founders.com)
1959.
New toy for Kagglers - Your team's own Splunk server (blog.kaggle.com)
1960.
Health care law stands in U.S. (elections.nytimes.com)
1961.
Robot Ethics: The Ethical and Social Implications of Robotics (ndpr.nd.edu)
1962.
Making sense of minimum viable products (johnnyholland.org)
1963.
Stardog 1.0 announced - high speed and simple deployment RDF database (weblog.clarkparsia.com)
1964.
Eric Raymond eats at the "Alan Turing" buffet (jng.imagine27.com)
1965.
Changing Your Email Address on Facebook Isn't Going To Help (papertreiger.wordpress.com)
1966.
In-depth on how SSDs really work (arstechnica.com)
1967.
How Imitation Spurs Innovation (marginalrevolution.com)
1968.
Taking Flight With The New Twitter Logo (blog.twitter.com)
1969.
Real Time Instant ACH Is Live Today [corrected link] (techcrunch.com)
1970.
Google and other tech vendors moving manufacturing back to US (nytimes.com)
1971.
My Granny is a Programmer (blog.progopedia.com)
1972.
Searching big strings (of DNA) with suffix arrays and range tables (williamedwardscoder.tumblr.com)
1973.
Humor: Texting with XCode (textfromxcode.com)
1974.
Improving the UX of programming tools - Take 2 (blog.opalang.org)
1975.
'38 Studios Spouse' speaks out (gamasutra.com)
1976.
The highly productive habits of Alan Turing (arstechnica.com)
1977.
YC-Backed Submittable Makes It Easy For Publishers To Manage Submissions (techcrunch.com)
1978.
No Naked Emperors: Have the Hard Conversations (courtneypowell.tumblr.com)
1979.
"The computer is electronic cocaine for many people" says UCLA neuroscientist (psmag.com)
1980.
Why Women Still Can't Have It All (theatlantic.com)