July 2009 Archive
1681.
Ask HN: Does the iPhone still need Flash support?
1682.
Is obesity an oral bacterial disease? (esciencenews.com)
1683.
How much food can you really grow in a city? You’d be surprised. (boston.com)
1684.
Ask HN: What service do you use for personal file backup? ()
1685.
Moof is Live (moof.com)
1686.
Why Girls Have BFFs and Boys Hang Out in Packs (time.com)
1687.
Ogg Theora, H.264 and the HTML 5 Browser Squabble (appleinsider.com)
1688.
Twitter Suggested for Nobel Peace Prize (pcworld.com)
1689.
Why Amazon pulled 1984 off users' Kindles (informationweek.com)
1690.
The publishers are not the enemy (andreyf.tumblr.com)
1691.
Would You Stand on Short Flights if It Meant Cheaper Fares? (blogs.wsj.com)
1692.
The Best Internet Addresses Will Cost a Cool .Million (bits.blogs.nytimes.com)
1693.
Ask HN, again: Do Companies Exploit Open Source And Programmers Are Plagiarists? ()
1694.
Google Voice Speech Recognition Not Really Working (rashmash.com)
1695.
How Inventors Always Get Screwed (informationweek.com)
1696.
Taking "Me, Inc." Public: Market Caps for Individuals (500hats.typepad.com)
1697.
In New York City, Fewer Murders on Rainy Days (nytimes.com)
1698.
GM hopes to sell its cars through eBay (money.cnn.com)
1699.
Ask HN: Is a patent app a product killer? ()
1700.
Hardware-acclerated text processing in SSE 4.2 (blog.reverberate.org)
1701.
LOAD"$",8 (pagetable.com)
1702.
Facebook Now Growing by Over 700,000 Users a Day, and New Engagement Stats (insidefacebook.com)
1703.
After Yucca Mountain: How to store US nuclear waste (arstechnica.com)
1704.
Ask YC: the image on PG's front page, what does it mean? (paulgraham.com)
1705.
Dear Malcolm: Why so threatened? (longtail.com)
1706.
Facebook Status Messages To Become Publicly Searchable (nytimes.com)
1707.
In defense of DHH & the Rails community (blog.lostlake.org)
1708.
The Pirate Bay May Be Launched As a Pay Service (news.cnet.com)
1709.
Can you guess the search phrase? (discerniblepreferences.com)
1710.
Firefox Approaches 1 Billion Downloads, Could Hit It Tomorrow (techcrunch.com)