September 2012 Archive
1471.
Ask HN: Help, I'm a developer who can't pay rent
1472.
No, This Is Not the Best iPhone Ever (slate.com)
1473.
Guy Points a Gun at Google Streetview Car (betabeat.com)
1474.
Hacker Guru (self-proclaimed) Ankit Fadia’s website Hacked (again) (trak.in)
1475.
GoogleWithoutGoogle - weekend project for a simple startpage (googlewithoutgoogle.com)
1476.
AMD deal brings Android apps to Windows 8 (bbc.co.uk)
1477.
Modern Web Application Development with Perl (modernperl.net)
1478.
Amazon’s colorful new towers will put a bold stamp on Seattle’s skyline (geekwire.com)
1479.
Gittip: New, Interesting, Important (justinlilly.com)
1480.
Start Hacking With Java 8 (functr.blogspot.co.uk)
1481.
Show HN: real-time map of Kickstarter projects (thingswestart.com)
1482.
Code Substitution Done Right - Switch.vim (vimninjas.com)
1483.
Intel Says Clover Trail Atom CPU Won't Work With Linux (linux.slashdot.org)
1484.
Labor Rules Snarl U.S. Commuter Trains (bloomberg.com)
1485.
Where Have All The Good Managers Gone? (thomaslarock.com)
1486.
On testing culture in GitHub projects (to.leif.me)
1487.
A Playstation 2 Emulator in Java (code.google.com)
1488.
Coursera: Launching Mathematical Expressions Checking (blog.coursera.org)
1489.
Emerging technologies usher in more fuel-efficient, comfortable aircraft (economist.com)
1490.
The Drug That Never Lets Go (pbs.org)
1491.
Software Foundations. Benjamin C. Pierce et al. (cis.upenn.edu)
1492.
Apple responds to iPhone 5 scuffs, says scratches and chips are ‘normal’ (extremetech.com)
1493.
Japan Commits to Eliminating Nuclear Power (spectrum.ieee.org)
1494.
Vinod Khosla says technology will replace 80 percent of doctors (venturebeat.com)
1495.
Saving Android From a Second-Rate Future (wired.com)
1496.
Results from my Reddit advertising attempt (blog.ezliu.com)
1497.
Test your Startup idea, Quick and Cheap. No coding needed. (lookaft.com)
1498.
"MapReduce is Good Enough" by Twitter scientist (arxiv.org)
1499.
Facebook uses Twitter Bootstrap (developers.facebook.com)
1500.
Alexis Ohanian, Reddit co-founder and Web advocate (washingtonpost.com)