April 2010 Archive
691.
HTML5 IRC client built with Mojolicious, ExtJS and WebSockets (dev.xantus.org)
692.
Debunking the Myths of the Telecommute (nytimes.com)
693.
Problems with CAP, and Yahoo’s little known NoSQL system (dbmsmusings.blogspot.com)
694.
Professionalism in Python or: How To Not Do Bad Things (artificialcode.blogspot.com)
695.
Rands in Repose: The Twinge (randsinrepose.com)
696.
Ball Balance Machine (blog.makezine.com)
697.
The Official Panic(.com) Basketball Team (panic.com)
698.
Blog about Common Lisp compiler internals (insidelisp.blogspot.com)
699.
Who's using Google App Engine? ()
700.
Ask HN: I accidentally downvoted a good comment. What now? ()
701.
Female strangers get better response rates when e-mailing professors (thelastpsychiatrist.com)
702.
Stop using Windows Notepad (blogs.msdn.com)
703.
Why the name "dynamic programming"? (arcanesentiment.blogspot.com)
704.
The closest thing we'll ever get to an official Apple blog (stevemail.tumblr.com)
705.
ITunes for Research Papers (mendeley.com)
706.
F# Basics An Introduction to Functional Programming for .NET Developers (msdn.microsoft.com)
707.
My Defamation 2.0 Experience (intelligentdesigns.net)
708.
Java 7 is adding dynamics (baptiste-wicht.com)
709.
Amazon pays partial refund for PS3 sale due to OtherOS feature removal (geek.com)
710.
Posterous (YC S08) founders named among top young tech entrepreneurs in 2010 (images.businessweek.com)
711.
How I Market Feedback Army (blog.feedbackarmy.com)
712.
Unix system programming in Objective Caml (ocamlunix.forge.ocamlcore.org)
713.
Crockford on JavaScript (yuiblog.com)
714.
Why I don't want Flash to die (and you shouldn't either) (waxpraxis.org)
715.
Why the laptop will become endangered tomorrow (superamit.tumblr.com)
716.
NoSQL: Why it's So Damn Sticky (roadtofailure.com)
717.
Reading Between the iPhone OS 4.0 Lines (daringfireball.net)
718.
F8 Preview: How Facebook Plans to Take Over the Web (gigaom.com)
719.
Ask HN: Do you look down on non-entrepreneurs?
720.
Nomic: "...a game in which changing the rules is a move." (earlham.edu)