January 2012 Archive
5641.
The Pirate Bay Launches Promo Platform For Artists (torrentfreak.com)
5642.
Thinking Aloud: The #1 Usability Tool (useit.com)
5643.
The LeanBack HTML5 Media Player (Audio & Video) (leanbackplayer.com)
5644.
Eclipse Code Formatting Tips (javacodegeeks.com)
5645.
Sarah Lacy’s PandoDaily launches with $2.5 million in funding (pandodaily.com)
5646.
4chan page load issues due to faulty mac mini cluster (WS) (boards.4chan.org)
5647.
The Battle For Original Content (pandodaily.com)
5648.
Wikipedia to join reddit in SOPA blackout Wednesday (arstechnica.com)
5649.
Parrot tickets now converted to GitHub (perlbuzz.com)
5650.
Founders of Twitter, Eventbrite, 99designs on Why It's Hard to Hire a Designer (zurb.com)
5651.
Notes on how I made tagdef.com really snappy (blog.tagdef.com)
5652.
Twitter boss slams Wikipedia's 'silly' Sopa protest (guardian.co.uk)
5653.
Richard Hamming - "You and Your Research" (cs.virginia.edu)
5654.
SGEntrepreneurs Does Not Support SOPA/PIPA (sgentrepreneurs.com)
5655.
The rules of evacuating a ship. Who leaves first? (bbc.co.uk)
5656.
How to Develop Your Fund Raising Strategy (bothsidesofthetable.com)
5657.
Expressing Intent (johndcook.com)
5658.
What is a pixel? (alistapart.com)
5659.
Best Hacker Conferences in 2012? (simplifyingsoftware.com)
5660.
Stop Censorship app by CloudFlare (It is excellent) (cloudflare.com)
5661.
Lucien: A Key Value Store With Smarts (github.com)
5662.
Research In Motion pushing for sale to Samsung (bgr.com)
5663.
Google+: Adding funny text to photos (plus.google.com)
5664.
New study by Facebook puts the web as "echo chamber" theory in doubt (slate.com)
5665.
Programmer Fiction: The Anorexic Startup (ikkyleaks.com)
5666.
Halcyon Days: Interviews with Classic Computer and Video Game Programmers (dadgum.com)
5667.
Facebook more than an echo chamber - Fb data team (facebook.com)
5668.
Weekend Project: Doorman, OAuth HTTP services with GitHub/Google Apps (movableink.github.com)
5669.
Samsung's not going to buy RIM (not now, anyway) (itworld.com)
5670.
Why Publishers Are About to Go Data Crazy (pbs.org)