September 2011 Archive
541.
This Developer's Life (thisdeveloperslife.com)
542.
Anonymous Member Banned By Court From Using His Real Name Online (techdirt.com)
543.
Inferno on Android (9fans.net)
544.
The “designers should code” bullshit and a not so new idea (intenseminimalism.com)
545.
Amazon Has High Hopes for Its iPad Competitor (nytimes.com)
546.
How not to recruit for a startup (wepay.com)
547.
Show HN: I built a webapp to help web "designers" create logos and fonts quickly (use.fontorie.com)
548.
A redditor explains how to make readline and bash more user friendly (reddit.com)
549.
The greatest joke ever told - lessons for pitching (thestartuptoolkit.com)
550.
From Pi to Puzzles: continued fraction of pi new record by a 13 years old (blog.wolfram.com)
551.
Instapaper’s (anti-)social network (marco.org)
552.
UK government response to my letter about programming in schools (blog.jgc.org)
553.
Sergey Brin’s Resume In 1996. Before Founding Google (immaturebusiness.com)
554.
Notepad of all my startup ideas (myasmine.com)
555.
What’s contained in a boarding pass barcode? (shaun.net)
556.
EVE Online Investment Scam Revealed (phaserinc.com)
557.
Obama Signs Patent ‘Reform’ Bill (wired.com)
558.
Diebold voting machines can be hacked by remote control (salon.com)
559.
Groupon IPO on hold (reuters.com)
560.
X86 Oddities (code.google.com)
561.
Saylor offers millions of dollars in bounties for open textbooks (saylor.org)
562.
Chrome Beats Internet Explorer To Become #2 Browser in India (blog.arpitnext.com)
563.
Anti-iPhone iPhone game makes it past Apple's review process (itunes.apple.com)
564.
Twitters new and blazingly fast interface (jacquesmattheij.com)
565.
Don't Be So F*cking Strategic (sriramk.tumblr.com)
566.
How an arcane statistical law could have prevented the Greek disaster (economicsintelligence.com)
567.
Google releases a fix for flash, before Adobe (securitywatch.pcmag.com)
568.
Ligament.js, the smallest, lightest-weight JS MVC Framework (gist.github.com)
569.
Ruby 1.9.3 RC1 is out (blade.nagaokaut.ac.jp)
570.
Two thousand years in one chart (economist.com)