February 2012 Archive
7411.
Yahoo tries to stop users exporting contacts that originally came from FB ()
7412.
Card Trick Leaves Penn and Teller Puzzled (youtube.com)
7413.
Neutrinos Might be Superluminal After All (news.sciencemag.org)
7414.
Dynamic langs have a refactoring libraries that know as much as a static IDE (rope.sourceforge.net)
7415.
Passengers pay more to jump taxi queue (theage.com.au)
7416.
Ask HN: Using Octopress for static website generation ()
7417.
The Free Internet Act (avc.com)
7418.
What's wrong with PHP API (in contrast to Perl) (tnx.nl)
7419.
Apple (Mostly) Isn't to Blame For the Patent Mess (forbes.com)
7420.
New visual form ui builder for jQuery developers ()
7421.
Chilled out: poll contradicts what we thought we knew about income & happiness (economist.com)
7422.
Chinese Police seize Apple iPhone branded gas stoves (edibleapple.com)
7423.
Van Gogh's "Starry Night" coming to life (BrandFlakesForBreakfast.com)
7424.
A very good answer why dropbox got so popular (quora.com)
7425.
Show HN: My weekend project 2 weeks later - over 11,000 Gumroad links (gumb.io)
7426.
Young People, Don't Screw Yourselves (stepanp.com)
7427.
Sprint commits to buying $15.5B worth of iPhones from Apple (thenextweb.com)
7428.
Want a promotion? Think like an entrepreneur (money.cnn.com)
7429.
Show HN: Visualize your Google Analytics data with Hexbins and d3 (zacharymaril.com)
7430.
Creators need an immediate connection to what they create (yakshaving.net)
7431.
Hyperlocal news site, Not monetized (crfpnews.com)
7432.
Point your mobile website to this url for Mobile Browser Test (rng.io)
7433.
NumPy on Google App Engine? (code.google.com)
7434.
Spidermonkey JM+TI JIT patches for PPC/OSX (bugzilla.mozilla.org)
7435.
Are rich people more unethical? (cnn.com)
7436.
Ask HN: Customer facing API, how would you do it? ()
7437.
Who is Hiring 2012 and sponsor H1 ()
7438.
How Your Cat Is Making You Crazy (theatlantic.com)
7439.
What “Big Semi” sales reps don’t seem to understand - Regarding (adafruit.com)
7440.
Google offers $1 million reward to hackers who exploit Chrome (arstechnica.com)