September 2009 Archive
3691.
Exercise, a short cut to inner peace (fulltimevagabond.com)
3692.
Insurance startup targets chronic but manageable diseases (pehub.com)
3693.
What it takes to go indie (week 1) (christopherroach.com)
3694.
5 Startups Launch At Capital Factory’s Demo Day In Austin (techcrunch.com)
3695.
Design of hydraulic cider press underway (fiveislandsorchard.wordpress.com)
3696.
What can be computed? (i-programmer.info)
3697.
PC Makers Abandoning a Sales Pitch Built on Complex Specs (nytimes.com)
3698.
Python coders who tried Google CodeJam ? ()
3699.
AMD to End Gigahertz Wars - no longer marketing by tech specs (fastcompany.com)
3700.
Dreams of Autarky (or What's wrong with the singularity) (hanson.gmu.edu)
3701.
The Buddy System: How Medical Data Revealed Secret to Health and Happiness (wired.com)
3702.
Motorola Cliq May Make Handset Makers Uncomfortable (bits.blogs.nytimes.com)
3703.
The Self-Educated Apple Genius (thedailybeast.com)
3704.
DEADBEEF for the CAFEBABE (pathsny.blogspot.com)
3705.
Are Impossibility Proofs Possible? (rjlipton.wordpress.com)
3706.
‘Too Big to Fail’ Is Dangerous, in Finance and Health Care (nytimes.com)
3707.
Why timing before coding is a good idea (holygoat.co.uk)
3708.
Innovation Happens Elsewhere, Open Source as Business Strategy (dreamsongs.com)
3709.
The Bonsai Primer (bonsaiprimer.com)
3710.
Maori legend of man-eating bird is true (independent.co.uk)
3711.
Is location independence 'unrealistic'? (itworld.com)
3712.
Beyond A/B testing: hypothesis testing for startups (rashmisinha.com)
3713.
Mercury News Reaches Out For Help (marklogic.blogspot.com)
3714.
MIT Students Explain How to Photograph Space for $150 (gizmodo.com)
3715.
Antarctica's hidden plumbing revealed (newscientist.com)
3716.
Three Basic Human Needs Startups Meet (teabuzzed.com)
3717.
Start-up Claims SSD Achieves 180,000 IOPS (computerworld.com)
3718.
Fake Video Can Convince Witnesses to Give False Testimony (wired.com)
3719.
Zipf, Power-laws, and Pareto - a ranking tutorial (hpl.hp.com)
3720.
AT&T to FCC: gaming is not "broadband," but an added service (arstechnica.com)