April 2010 Archive
391.
Robot that autonomously folds a pile of towels (youtube.com)
392.
Rutgers lab studies female orgasm through brain imaging (nj.com)
393.
Hatetris: Tetris That Hates You (qntm.org)
394.
Debt: The first five thousand years (blog.longnow.org)
395.
Longform: Good, long journalism, 4000 words and up (longform.org)
396.
LLVM 2.7 Released (llvm.org)
397.
How To Design Like Apple (pragmaticmarketing.com)
398.
Ruby Best Practices - Full Book Now Available For Free (blog.rubybestpractices.com)
399.
Seattle cartoonist launches "Everybody Draw Mohammed Day" (mynorthwest.com)
400.
Ask HN: What's your favorite April Fools Joke today? ()
401.
David Heinemeier Hansson's Setup (david.heinemeier.hansson.usesthis.com)
402.
Why the iPad and the iPhone don't support multitasking (blog.rlove.org)
403.
Attention and Intelligence (scienceblogs.com)
404.
Mixergy gets to know a lot about Steve Jobs from the founder of Smugmug (mixergy.com)
405.
"I decided to add "inertial" scrolling, where you gave the image a push..." (folklore.org)
406.
The math behind a neat calculator trick (divisbyzero.com)
407.
Using Node.js and Cappuccino to create real time collaborative drawing (techblog.gomockingbird.com)
408.
Cheat sheet for Lisp dialects (Common Lisp, Scheme, Clojure, Emacs Lisp) (hyperpolyglot.wikidot.com)
409.
jQuery Masonry (desandro.com)
410.
Haskell vs. Erlang for bittorent clients (jlouisramblings.blogspot.com)
411.
Statistical Data Mining Tutorials (autonlab.org)
412.
Why Desktop Linux (Still) Sucks. And What We Can Do To Fix It. (blip.tv)
413.
More weight, fewer reps works best. (nytimes.com)
414.
Ask HN: Who is already sick of all of these "Like" buttons plastered everywhere? ()
415.
Apple to acquire ARM? (theregister.co.uk)
416.
Why aren’t you contributing (To Python)? (jessenoller.com)
417.
How to write to stderr so people will like you (utcc.utoronto.ca)
418.
I Want a New Data Store (for Craigslist) (blog.zawodny.com)
419.
Bechtolsheim Thinks New 10G Switch Changes the Game Again (blogs.wsj.com)
420.
Never hire job hoppers. Never. They make terrible employees. (bothsidesofthetable.com)