2011 Archive
12991.
Scott Meyers, Andrei Alexandrescu and Herb Sutter: C++ and Beyond (channel9.msdn.com)
12992.
Storm: distributed and fault-tolerant realtime computation (slides) (slideshare.net)
12993.
John R. Opel, Who Made I.B.M. a Colossus, Dies at 86 (nytimes.com)
12994.
Well, Actually (tirania.org)
12995.
NetBSD now runs on Amazon EC2 (wiki.netbsd.org)
12996.
Languages as Libraries (blog.racket-lang.org)
12997.
Socialcam 2.0 lands on the iPhone (techcrunch.com)
12998.
Real World Functional Programming - Book excerpts (msdn.microsoft.com)
12999.
Name Squatting and Anonymous Coolness. (cmdrtaco.net)
13000.
[London] Songkick (YC S07) growing our engineering team (songkick.com)
13001.
Dropbox Tech Blog: Translating Dropbox (tech.dropbox.com)
13002.
Ask HN: Whatever happened to the no-politics rule? ()
13003.
Any.DO: a nice todo list (any.do)
13004.
It’s time to stop using Subversion (altdevblogaday.org)
13005.
Software engineers hard to find (articles.chicagotribune.com)
13006.
I Hate CSS (blog.aaziz.org)
13007.
When software offends, the pantyshot package controversy (zdnet.com)
13008.
How I survived one week without an adblocker (bitboxer.de)
13009.
Fukushima Fallout Reaches San Francisco (technologyreview.com)
13010.
Apple wins ban of HTC devices at US International Trade Commission (theverge.com)
13011.
Students: You Are Probably Not Mark Zuckerberg, So Stay In School (wadhwa.com)
13012.
U.K. men get 4-year sentences for Facebook riot posts (news.cnet.com)
13013.
Tell HN: Rejected from App Store - "customer damaging their iPhone."
13014.
He who refuses to do arithmetic is doomed to talk nonsense (www-formal.stanford.edu)
13015.
Show HN: Restaurant POS system built completely on iOS
13016.
On Using Debuggers (plope.com)
13017.
Can anyone explain why Windows is so bad at copying files? (andrewducker.livejournal.com)
13018.
Ask HN: Why do big companies tend to only build with Java? ()
13019.
Show HN: My weekend project - Chessboard picture recognition (codebazaar.blogspot.com)
13020.
Portable sunshine: Earbuds that shine light into your ears (wired.co.uk)