December 2009 Archive
1531.
Simplified Explanation of Computing the Complexity of Nash Equilibrium (people.csail.mit.edu)
1532.
Being a web startup shouldn't be good enough for you (startupnorth.ca)
1533.
One In Five Divorce Petitions Mention Facebook? (techdirt.com)
1534.
Miller, key to obtaining 14,700 tons of silver Manhattan Project (web.archive.org)
1535.
This is the way the World may look like 50 million years from now (scotese.com)
1536.
Drexler: cognitive bias causes progress in nanotech to be overlooked (metamodern.com)
1537.
Taking Hold in Silicon Valley, a Ping-Pong Boom (nytimes.com)
1538.
How new technology disrupted America’s newspapers—in 1845 (economist.com)
1539.
When and How to Micromanage (inc.com)
1540.
Visualizing Data with R and ggplot2 (Video) (drewconway.com)
1541.
Norvig: What to demand from a Scientific Computing Lang Even if you don't care (archive.org)
1542.
Thank you HN. ()
1543.
Fear of tech commitment (johndcook.com)
1544.
Apple may demo tablet on Jan. 26; Jobs "extremely happy" with final product (networkworld.com)
1545.
Apple May Be On The Verge Of Kneecapping The Cable Industry. Finally. (techcrunch.com)
1546.
How Serious Is Justin.tv About Fighting Live Broadcasting Piracy? (techcrunch.com)
1547.
Is Facebook a Brand that You Can Trust? (radar.oreilly.com)
1548.
Latest Chromium builds for Mac OS X support Chrome Extensions (build.chromium.org)
1549.
21 Things That Became Obsolete This Decade (businessinsider.com)
1550.
Spotlight on ISS: Atlanta’s Security Cluster (techdrawl.com)
1551.
Verizon can ban you for posting off-topic info on forums, chat rooms or facebook (verizon.net)
1552.
It is no longer possible to be polite. (ellgato.livejournal.com)
1553.
Ask HN: Why can't we prove the Blub Hypothesis? ()
1554.
Designers are not Programmers (ignorethecode.net)
1555.
The Dark Side of Zipcar (blurpr.com)
1556.
The country club revolt (aka Operation Chokehold) (clipperhouse.com)
1557.
Python 2.7 alpha 1 (mail.python.org)
1558.
The gradual decline of RSS readers (readwriteweb.com)
1559.
No Rise of Fraction CO2 In Atmosphere (vs. elsewhere) in Past 160 Years (sciencedaily.com)
1560.
Intel kills consumer Larrabee (semiaccurate.com)