November 2011 Archive
421.
Mark Pincus memo to Zynga employees (finance.fortune.cnn.com)
422.
Quotes from 1995 Steve Jobs Interview (lukew.com)
423.
Security researcher responds to CarrierIQ with video proof (geek.com)
424.
LHC May Have Found Crack in Modern Physics (wired.com)
425.
Where does Google actually say that they won’t read Gmail or Google Docs? (blogs.law.harvard.edu)
426.
Design is becoming a competitive advantage for startups (venturebeat.com)
427.
Microsoft Announces "Kinect Accelerator" to Turn Hacks into Businesses (technologyreview.com)
428.
Clojure on Hadoop: A New Hope (blog.factual.com)
429.
Ex Google PM criticizes new Reader layout (brianshih.com)
430.
Taking C Seriously (subfurther.com)
431.
Go Cry on Somebody Else's Shoulder: MongoDB is fine (blog.slyphon.com)
432.
Open Sourced Google Wave demo site. Run from a single server (waveinabox.net)
433.
Why Lisp Will Never Win (2003) (perl.plover.com)
434.
Why Stack Exchange Isn’t in the Cloud (blog.serverfault.com)
435.
Skeuomorphism: The Opiate of the People (andymangold.com)
436.
Remember the "borderless" Internet? It's officially dead (arstechnica.com)
437.
Move The Web Forward (movethewebforward.org)
438.
Electronic contact lens displays pixels on the eyes (newscientist.com)
439.
Roy — small functional language that compiles to JavaScript (roy.brianmckenna.org)
440.
The plumber programmer (johndcook.com)
441.
YC Interview Advice From a Guy Who Got An Interview and Didn’t Get Accepted (plus.google.com)
442.
Dynamic Periodic Table (ptable.com)
443.
MPAA Costs Hollywood More Than US BitTorrent Piracy (torrentfreak.com)
444.
Why we’re working our young people too hard (lkd.cc)
445.
Brain Gain: The Underground World of Neuroenhancing Drugs (newyorker.com)
446.
Portrait of a N00b (steve-yegge.blogspot.com)
447.
Documents Reveal TSA Proposal To Body-Scan Pedestrians, Train Passengers (forbes.com)
448.
Why programmers are not paid in proportion to their productivity (2009) (johndcook.com)
449.
Printrbot: Your Very Own 3D Printer (kickstarter.com)
450.
Moving on from Rails (broadcastingadam.com)