September 2012 Archive
1711.
YouTube Moves API Discussions/Support To Stack Overflow From Google Groups (techcrunch.com)
1712.
Learn How to make a Single Element Macbook Pro in CSS3 (cssdeck.com)
1713.
Apple Presents "Nothing" (techcrunch.com)
1714.
Show HN: Twilio Pricing API hack (twiliopricing.herokuapp.com)
1715.
Why Nikola Tesla Is Your New Hacker Hero (betabeat.com)
1716.
Try Topaz (Rebol inspired language) (colellachiara.com)
1717.
The Rise of the Mobile Web (and Web Audio on iOS 6) (jlongster.com)
1718.
The Eye of the Needle (crashdev.com)
1719.
The Britishisation of American English (bbc.co.uk)
1720.
What Kindle Means for Android (blog.geekli.st)
1721.
Microsoft: 'To fill 6,000 jobs, we'll pay $10K per visa' (theregister.co.uk)
1722.
What is spaghetti code? (blog.jelastic.com)
1723.
The Declaration of Twitter Independence (twitterindependence.com)
1724.
Apple Has a New Cook (blog.jarederondu.com)
1725.
Ask HN: You're in an empty room. How do you generate a random number?
1726.
Airbnb Is Raising A Big Third Round, Aiming For A Valuation North Of $2B (techcrunch.com)
1727.
Show HN: We're building a better music distribution platform (mvsic.co)
1728.
Shocked by San Francisco, on my very first day (genesx.com)
1729.
HP CEO: We Have to Ultimately Offer a Smartphone (nasdaq.com)
1730.
Coming Soon: Toilet Paper Priced Like Airline Tickets (online.wsj.com)
1731.
Could Portland be the best city in the country for developers right now? (blog.appfog.com)
1732.
Epic commit message (github.com)
1733.
Show HN: Conjure - A launcher for Android (play.google.com)
1734.
Clock on iOS6 iPads is an homage to a 1944 design by Hans Hilfiker (de.wikipedia.org)
1735.
Photos from inside North Korean Ryugyong Hotel (facebook.com)
1736.
IPhone case with integrated charging cord (kickstarter.com)
1737.
Retickr: A Year In The App Store (about.retickr.com)
1738.
The stunning hypocrisy of VentureBeat's attack on Y Combinator (influencehacks.com)
1739.
Show HN: Lookmark, read what your friends are reading (for Chrome) (lookmark.com)
1740.
Neuroscientists successfully control the dreams of rats (io9.com)