May 2010 Archive
751.
Hearing prayer shuts off believers' brain activity (boingboing.net)
752.
Disturbing Scientific Discoveries (smithsonianmag.com)
753.
Words I'd ban from all websites (imediaconnection.com)
754.
Lamson 1.0 Released (a Python SMTP server by Zed Shaw) (sheddingbikes.com)
755.
Tell HN: Add a '+' to the end of any bit.ly link to get the full URL. ()
756.
Hiring: The Lake Wobegon Strategy (2006) (googleresearch.blogspot.com)
757.
Facebook Delete Button (ssl.facebook.com)
758.
The curious case of equidistant boxes, a CSS fail (blog.directededge.com)
759.
Facebook, Zynga, and buyer-supplier hold up (cdixon.org)
760.
Facebook claims data portability is criminal (blog.dataportability.org)
761.
Using your laptop to compute PageRank for millions of webpages (michaelnielsen.org)
762.
Facebook, MySpace Confront Privacy Loophole (online.wsj.com)
763.
Ask HN: What's your morning routine?
764.
Mark Cuban: place a 25 cent-per-share transaction fee on Wall St. trades (wallstreetpit.com)
765.
Permanent Weight Loss (crockford.com)
766.
Homeless, But Enjoying Hawaii On $3 A Day (npr.org)
767.
Google to offer encrypted search next week (news.cnet.com)
768.
Estimate for number of books sold per Kindle: 27 (spreadsheets.google.com)
769.
BP oil slick (youtube.com)
770.
Computer program writing great, original works of classical music (slate.com)
771.
Which programming language...? (iamgabeaudick.tumblr.com)
772.
The arrangement with my code is the same as with my text. I create, you consume. (qntm.org)
773.
Design Guidelines: Why doesn't every site/company have this? (stanford.edu)
774.
Safari 4, built entirely with valid HTML5 and CSS3. Nary an image was used. (general-metrics.com)
775.
The Pentagon’s recipe for brownies is 26 pages long (reason.com)
776.
Google Python Style Guide (google-styleguide.googlecode.com)
777.
Schneier on Times Square (roomfordebate.blogs.nytimes.com)
778.
Latin proverbs (en.wikiquote.org)
779.
All-Nighters: Miles to Go (opinionator.blogs.nytimes.com)
780.
Million dollar baby: Making millions selling open source hardware. (blog.makezine.com)