September 2009 Archive
1861.
What If Everyone Makes Money Except Twitter? (markevanstech.com)
1862.
JRR Tolkien trained as British spy (telegraph.co.uk)
1863.
FounderCast Episode 0 (foundercast.com)
1864.
Brain Scans Reveal What You’ve Seen (wired.com)
1865.
Google Chrome turns one: a few questions and attempts at answers. (technologizer.com)
1866.
Ask HN: Anybody here active on folding at home ? ()
1867.
Review HN: Ten Seconds of Happy - My Weekend Project (tensecondsofhappy.com)
1868.
Google Answers Microsoft :Chrome Frame is safe. (eweekeurope.co.uk)
1869.
Shockmarket: Quant trading startup circa 1999. (geocities.com)
1870.
Ask HN: What happens when a founder gets divorced? ()
1871.
Ask HN: Is there a stack-overflow-like site devoted to graphic design? ()
1872.
The other side of crowdsourcing (transcapitalist.com)
1873.
Monkeys Don’t Go For Music - Unless It’s Made for Them (wired.com)
1874.
EBay Acquisition Map Shows Where It Got On The Wrong Track (techcrunch.com)
1875.
Blogger: The Rodney Dangerfield of Blogging (markevanstech.com)
1876.
Measuring clout (the people who spread ideas) on the web (sethgodin.typepad.com)
1877.
Top Teams for Seedcamp Week 2009 Announced (blog.seedcamp.com)
1878.
United States of Zhmerinca (2005) (artlebedev.com)
1879.
On HTML 5 Drag and Drop (alertdebugging.com)
1880.
Kernel 2.6.31 to speed up Linux desktop (techworld.com.au)
1881.
Andrew Marr: Why I've Given Up Shampooing My Hair (dailymail.co.uk)
1882.
Ways Marketing Weasels Will Try to Manipulate You (codinghorror.com)
1883.
AJAX and Network-side Scripting (devcentral.f5.com)
1884.
The Man Who Found Quarks and Made Sense of the Universe (Interview w/ Gell-Mann) (discovermagazine.com)
1885.
Urban Hopper robot can leap over 25-foot walls (news.cnet.com)
1886.
Ask HN: Do any small profile changes increase usage in your app? (rypple.com)
1887.
The looming (storage) bandwidth wall (scalability.org)
1888.
My story and support for the #FoundersVisa (k9ventures.com)
1889.
FounderCast Episode 1 (this one is edited) (foundercast.com)
1890.
Clean your data: What programmers can do to remove 'dirt' from databases (itworld.com)