June 2008 Archive
391.
Salmon is disappearing. (nytimes.com)
392.
Ask YC: Abandon my new corporate job to build my startup? ()
393.
Innovation, Or the Complete Lack Thereof, In the Start-up Community (kurt.karmalab.org)
394.
Ask HN: Ethics and laws regarding scraping websites?
395.
Why giving poor kids laptops doesn't improve their scholastic performance (slate.com)
396.
How English Is Evolving Into a Language We May Not Even Understand (wired.com)
397.
First viable compressed air car: get 200-300km per tank of air. (businessweek.com)
398.
A Cellphone's Missing Dot Kills Two People, Puts Three More in Jail (gizmodo.com)
399.
Twitter:we made it (blog.twitter.com)
400.
Time Warner Cable to Block All Usenet Access Nationwide (news.cnet.com)
401.
Ask YC: Other than Google Adwords, what is the best form of paid advertising? ()
402.
Not going dark (ruby metaprogramming) (weblog.raganwald.com)
403.
PLT Scheme 4.0 released (blog.plt-scheme.org)
404.
Bringing Sexy Back: 280Slides (matthewpaulmoore.com)
405.
'The Innovator's Dilemma' -- innovation in the hard-disk industry. (businessweek.com)
406.
A humorous introduction to Haskell (freeshells.ch)
407.
Copy the practices that were in place when a successful company (e.g. Google) was truly innovative (andrewhargadon.typepad.com)
408.
Delighting with Data (tomtaylor.co.uk)
409.
7 Uncannily Obvious Lessons From A Product Launch (onstartups.com)
410.
Ask YC: Does anybody enjoy unit testing their code? ()
411.
"The singularity is a religious rather than a scientific vision" (spectrum.ieee.org)
412.
ASk HN: Anyone working on hardware for his/her startup? ()
413.
Why Politicized Science is Dangerous (crichton-official.com)
414.
The Firefox religion (blakeross.com)
415.
How Hard Could it Be?: Adventures in Office Space (inc.com)
416.
Mayor Bloomberg Unveils New York City Venture Fund (NYC Seed) (dealbook.blogs.nytimes.com)
417.
Maglev and the naiivety of the Rails community (fukamachi.org)
418.
Ask YC: Why does Paul Graham use the Yahoo favicon? ()
419.
Popularity Algorithms ()
420.
The Mountains of Pi (newyorker.com)