November 2007 Archive
211.
Exactly, Ruby Isn't An Insurgency (hackety.org)
212.
Ron Paul says his campaign is more than "a few spammers" (nytimes.com)
213.
How To Minimize Your Javascript and CSS Files for Faster Page Loads (maxkiesler.com)
214.
Dissecting Marc Andreesen's elevator pitch for Ning (venturehacks.com)
215.
Would You Give This Kid $500,000? (portfolio.com)
216.
Should you have to pay to see research your taxes paid for? (washingtonpost.com)
217.
Google Android SDK now available (code.google.com)
218.
Co-Founder Issues Driving You Crazy? 7 Simple Insights. (onstartups.com)
219.
YouTube for Computer Science researchers (videolectures.net)
220.
Want to know what Web 2.0 offices look like or what millions of funding can buy? (officesnapshots.com)
221.
Red Hat on EC2 (webware.com)
222.
Colleges and Universities that Offer Free Courses Online (education-portal.com)
223.
Free is more complicated than you think (radar.oreilly.com)
224.
Google Options Make Masseuse a Multimillionaire (nytimes.com)
225.
Great cartoon on what the customer wants...and what they get (startupstudents.com)
226.
[SF/NYC] Heysan! is hiring Mobile Web/Web Developer (docs.google.com)
227.
The Continuous World of Dungeon Siege (drizzle.com)
228.
Reclaim Reddit: Greasemonkey script to remove Ron Paul stories (reddit.com)
229.
Any suggestions on good places to find freelance developers? ()
230.
Which Y Combinator backed companies are still alive? ()
231.
Ask YC: The way hackers plan software ()
232.
Race, genes and intelligence (slate.com)
233.
Atlas Shrugged movie in 2008 (Angelina Jolie as Dagny Taggart) (imdb.com)
234.
NYT graph of historical price of gas since 1920 (nytimes.com)
235.
What If Gmail Had Been Designed by Microsoft? (blogoscoped.com)
236.
Five problems with Google Android (unqualified-reservations.blogspot.com)
237.
Greg from Xobni pontificates on memory managers (gregduffy.com)
238.
VC failure rates (unionsquareventures.com)
239.
Cal physicists make a radio 10,000 times thinner than a human hair (sfgate.com)
240.
What if powerful languages and idioms only work for small teams? (weblog.raganwald.com)