January 2011 Archive
841.
Awesome UI screenshots from applications running on Symbolics Lisp Machines (lispm.dyndns.org)
842.
Creating an iPhone App From Scratch (sans Xcode/IB) (lambdadevp.blogspot.com)
843.
Show HN: 3DTin - 3D modelling in browser (3dtin.com)
844.
How to write a simple TCP Server in Haskell (catonmat.net)
845.
Day 1 for a $1 app on the Mac App Store (lacquer.fi)
846.
C Macro Tips and Tricks (mikeash.com)
847.
EU funds open source language Scala (h-online.com)
848.
A Homebrew CPU from scratch (buildacpu.blogspot.com)
849.
Landing a Job at 9 Hot Startups (mashable.com)
850.
"Should I still learn Java?" Answered: Yes. (beginwithjava.blogspot.com)
851.
Fitness for geeks: my annual review of the Stronglifts 5x5 program (tomaskohl.com)
852.
The Italian entrepreneur who moved his team and got funded in 19 days (eu.techcrunch.com)
853.
Google May Let Users Personally Blacklist Domains To Fight Spam (searchengineland.com)
854.
Show HN my christmas project: Focus.app, cut off your Internet so you can focus (therealfocusapp.com)
855.
Teeth LEDs (bits.blogs.nytimes.com)
856.
Advice to a college sophomore programmer (pchristensen.com)
857.
Steve Pavlina releases 1000+ personal development articles into public domain (stevepavlina.com)
858.
3D-Printed Flute Is Here (pcworld.com)
859.
Xfce 4.8 released (xfce.org)
860.
Eloquent Javascript now in print (nostarch.com)
861.
The 3 most important things I learned from Google (part 2) (from employee #13) (googler13.blogspot.com)
862.
About that slowness on Twitter… (dustindiaz.com)
863.
Rob Pike: Geek of the Week (simple-talk.com)
864.
XBMC now works on Apple TV, iPad and iPhone (geek.com)
865.
"I never agreed to that. Here's what I signed." (reddit.com)
866.
In Defense Of The PhD (soundandcomplete.com)
867.
The Practical vs. Idealistic Scenarios for the Near-Term Future of Online Video (daringfireball.net)
868.
AT&T Pins 4G Label to Existing Network (online.wsj.com)
869.
How to Identify a Good Perl Programmer (modernperlbooks.com)
870.
No opting out from Facebook turning your check-ins, likes into ads (arstechnica.com)