November 2010 Archive
451.
Cool Physics: Visualizing microwaves in a microwave oven (gaurabc.com)
452.
Proving P!=NP: "...Ryan has taken the first real baby step in decades." (blog.computationalcomplexity.org)
453.
Good blog discussing algorithms and data structures (ihas1337code.com)
454.
Heroku is Hiring ()
455.
Opt Out of a Body Scan? Then Brace Yourself (finance.yahoo.com)
456.
Scientists say dolphins should be treated as 'non-human persons' (current.com)
457.
Simple kernel attack: Eat 100% CPU, works under guest, no way to protect (lkml.org)
458.
Lessons learned from wikipedia's fundraising banner design (meta.wikimedia.org)
459.
Best Practices of Combining Typefaces (smashingmagazine.com)
460.
Google Sawzall now open source (code.google.com)
461.
Two Kinects at once is now possible (kinecthacks.net)
462.
Build your own Startup Death Clock (blog.asmartbear.com)
463.
Fractals Without A Computer (scientopia.org)
464.
It’s Morning in India (nytimes.com)
465.
Thank PG: For reclaiming the word 'hacker' ()
466.
Steve Klabnik Quits Job to Work on Hackety Hack (blog.steveklabnik.com)
467.
Changing Passwords (schneier.com)
468.
This (very basic) website is hosted on an alarm clock (kwf.dyndns.org)
469.
The Importance of Abandoning Crap (modernerd.com)
470.
Node-canvas. Server side HTML5 canvas implementation in node.js (learnboost.com)
471.
Getting A New Product Off The Ground: Part Two (kalzumeus.com)
472.
The reason behind the "nnCoection" HTTP header (forums.aws.amazon.com)
473.
Mozilla Is Designing a New Programming Language Language Called Rust (readwriteweb.com)
474.
Lisp interpreter in 90 lines of C++ (howtowriteaprogram.blogspot.com)
475.
Hubris Versus Humility: The $15 billion Difference (steveblank.com)
476.
A New Era for Design (blog.kickstarter.com)
477.
Implementing a HTML5 canvas-based, tilt sensing snow globe (blog.webreakstuff.com)
478.
A Cautionary Tale from the Startup World (randfishkin.com)
479.
Image hosting that doesn't suck - just drag and drop (min.us)
480.
Leading scientists say backscatter X-ray may be far more dangerous than thought (npr.org)