October 2012 Archive
16501.
Spotflux (spotflux.com)
16502.
Social Events made easy (youtube.com)
16503.
Apple issues invites to October 23rd event, possibly for iPad mini (thenextweb.com)
16504.
Growth Hacking: Structuring incentives that lead to user-generated growth (platformed.info)
16505.
Human-Powered Helicopters: Straight Up Difficult (NPR Video) (vimeo.com)
16506.
How to Create Mobile-Ready WebForms Applications 101 (blogs.telerik.com)
16507.
Shuttleworth demos Juju at OSCON (youtu.be)
16508.
Apple: We've got a little more to show you (arstechnica.com)
16509.
Performance: EC2 vs. ProfitBricks vs. Rackspace (profitbricks.com)
16510.
Introduction to resolution and MTF curves (normankoren.com)
16511.
Iron Man's Virtual Screen Exists (technostart.blogspot.in)
16512.
Managing Yourself: The Paradox of Excellence (hbr.org)
16513.
Key differences between the actors model and bulk synchronous parallel (quora.com)
16514.
Twitter acquires Cabana (cabanaapp.com)
16515.
Work efficiency recipe (m-a-tech.blogspot.co.uk)
16516.
Ask HN: How to pick up algorithm programming? ()
16517.
New Planet in Neighborhood, Astronomically Speaking (nytimes.com)
16518.
News, Status & Discussion about Standard C++ (isocpp.org)
16519.
Facebook India is Paying $1 To Register Through The Mobile Site (machinehappy.com)
16520.
Genesis: On History and Computer Science (blog.darwish.be)
16521.
Myths of Running: Forefoot, Barefoot and Otherwise (well.blogs.nytimes.com)
16522.
It’s Not Pretty: Lean Startups vs. Brick and Mortar (brianpiercy.com)
16523.
Entrepreneur view: How can we help first-time entrepreneurs? (blog.startuppirates.org)
16524.
Clojure turns 5 (groups.google.com)
16525.
Dublin Web Summit 2012 Main Stage - Live Stream (websummit.net)
16526.
U.S. Jails More People Than Any Other Country (bloomberg.com)
16527.
Nordic Startup Awards wants to liberate Scandinavians from "excessive modesty" (whiteboardmag.com)
16528.
P2V migration – a live CentOS server to a KVM guest (catn.com)
16529.
Screen -r Cannot open your terminal '/dev/pts/2' - please check. ()
16530.
Pacemaker hack can deliver deadly 830-volt jolt (computerworld.com)