August 2012 Archive
1231.
Confirmed: OnLive’s assets sold to another company (venturebeat.com)
1232.
GitHub.js (github.com)
1233.
Ask HN: Why not Java?
1234.
New Zealand: Wish you were here? (startribune.com)
1235.
Drinking at work: the boredom of boozeless business (economist.com)
1236.
Who's afraid of Solar PV? (theconversation.edu.au)
1237.
Show HN: Indoor Location you can try yourself (play.google.com)
1238.
Python on Wheels (pythononwheels.org)
1239.
Haxx.ly - remix any website with your own css/js to share with friends (haxx.ly)
1240.
Groupon down 27%, hits new low of $5.50 (google.com)
1241.
The Money/Time fallacy (thoughts.maayank.com)
1242.
Phusion Passenger Enterprise released (blog.phusion.nl)
1243.
The Pixate Project: Bringing CSS to Native Apps (benzilla.galbraiths.org)
1244.
MacBook Air Mountain Lion Battery Life: 10.7.4 vs 10.8 vs 10.8.1 (macobserver.com)
1245.
Why XSS is serious business (and why Tesco needs to pay attention) (troyhunt.com)
1246.
"I'm feeling lucky" no more (googlesystem.blogspot.com)
1247.
Why isn’t Twitter charging for their API? (dustyreagan.com)
1248.
How Copyrights Ruined the Olympics and What You Can Learn From It (blog.kunvay.com)
1249.
Why to auto-answer video calls (blog.quicklychat.com)
1250.
Filepicker.io (YC S12) lets content flow without worrying about bandwidth (gigaom.com)
1251.
Disney's 'Physical Face Cloning' produces the ultimate photo-realistic robots (digitaltrends.com)
1252.
Source Code Makeover: Square Shooter, Part 1 (inventwithpython.com)
1253.
All great managers are alike (tomtunguz.com)
1254.
Writing graphics software gets much easier (web.mit.edu)
1255.
How Big Data Became So Big (nytimes.com)
1256.
Leak Finder: a new tool for JavaScript (google-opensource.blogspot.com)
1257.
Neither the Will nor the Cash: Why India Wins So Few Olympic Medals (m.theatlantic.com)
1258.
Plan 9 from Bell Labs (1995) (plan9.bell-labs.com)
1259.
UpStart.com: The Startup is you. A new approach to funding and mentorship. (upstart.com)
1260.
This Website Only Open During Business Hours (freakonomics.com)