February 2008 Archive
631.
A wider choice of mates reduces people's reproductive output. (economist.com)
632.
Next Ubuntu release to be called Intrepid Ibex (arstechnica.com)
633.
Pentaho (Open source BI) Takes $12 Million Series C (techcrunch.com)
634.
Startup: File Destructor 2.0 (xnet.se)
635.
XHTML 2 vs HTML 5 (immike.net)
636.
A REALLY innovative way to write (domain-specific) code (youtube.com)
637.
Linus Torvalds Interview, Part II (linux-foundation.org)
638.
The American Conservative publishes Sibel Edmonds' story of corruption at Washington's highest levels (amconmag.com)
639.
Eee PC- A Few Months Later, Reality Sets In (geek.com)
640.
Profession: a thought provoking Asimov short story on education (abelard.org)
641.
Spammers crack Gmail Captcha (theregister.co.uk)
642.
EU fines Microsoft a record $1.3 billion (msnbc.msn.com)
643.
Reinventing the Inbox (features Xobni) (newsweek.com)
644.
Flickr Rebellion Brews at Specter of M$ Acquisition (blog.wired.com)
645.
Complete Introduction to git (students.ceid.upatras.gr)
646.
Clothes That Produce Power (npr.org)
647.
Screedbot - make your own scrolling typewriter text (powered by Common Lisp) (wigflip.com)
648.
Disruptive language learning, Internet style (nytimes.com)
649.
Ask YC: Anyone using Google Gears or any other client-server sync solution for their startup webapp? ()
650.
Applying (Math) Theory at Microsoft (technologyreview.com)
651.
Why smart people defend bad ideas (old essay, but good read) (scottberkun.com)
652.
Startup Plans to Solve Online Identity Theft, But Does Anyone Care? (wired.com)
653.
The Internet has led to a huge net savings in energy (csmonitor.com)
654.
Crash: Amazon's S3 utility goes down (roughtype.com)
655.
Gmail's Humble Beginning (googlesystem.blogspot.com)
656.
Look before you leak - By Robert X. Cringely (infoworld.com)
657.
GitTorrent Protocol version 0.1 (gittorrent.utsl.gen.nz)
658.
Ouija: A Scheme Interpreter in Flash (solve-et-coagula.com)
659.
LOLpresentation - the dream becomes a reality (and it actually works?) (reddit.blogspot.com)
660.
Data is the New Links. Tim Berners-Lee Says Sites That Don’t Give Users Their Data Back Are Boring (techcrunch.com)