January 2011 Archive
211.
Why Your Form Buttons Should Never Say 'Submit' (uxmovement.com)
212.
Google to Launch Groupon Competitor (mashable.com)
213.
The Rise of the New Global Elite (theatlantic.com)
214.
The most mysterious Google ranking ever... (jamespanderson.tumblr.com)
215.
Chrome Release Cycle (docs.google.com)
216.
One with Vim (invisibletheory.com)
217.
Tutorspree (YC W11) Is An Airbnb For Tutoring (techcrunch.com)
218.
Extruding Ice from Steel Fences and Pipes with Diurnal Freeze/Thaw (my.ilstu.edu)
219.
"I think that djb redo will turn out to be the Git of build systems." (pozorvlak.livejournal.com)
220.
Pizza And Ramen Are Hurting Your Startup (blog.500startups.com)
221.
I Paid a Bribe (ipaidabribe.com)
222.
A warning to hackers: be careful building on Twitter's API (hoisie.com)
223.
Sony uses DMCA to silence speech that reveals its security flaws (eff.org)
224.
Apple.com gets a redesign (apple.com)
225.
How the FBI raided Anonymous (arstechnica.com)
226.
Plenty Of Fish Hacked – Chris Russo’s explains how he did it (grumomedia.com)
227.
Why I Left Google (jeanhsu.com)
228.
Quantifying The Value Of A College Degree (By Major) (kalzumeus.com)
229.
Why Is Eric Schmidt Stepping Down at Google? (newyorker.com)
230.
Periodic Table of Google APIs (code.google.com)
231.
Website calculates how your life might be like in another country (ifitweremyhome.com)
232.
When A Game Designer teaches a College Course: No Grading, just Levelling Up (gamingtheclassroom.wordpress.com)
233.
What does one trillion dollars look like? (pagetutor.com)
234.
When Smart People are Bad Employees (blogs.forbes.com)
235.
How Lisp macros differ from static code-generation and metaprogramming (brandonbyars.com)
236.
Neat trick for getting private info for Facebook, GMail, Twitter and Digg users (grepular.com)
237.
Life as a Second Class Citizen of the Web (oonwoye.com)
238.
Forget Quora, New York's Stack Overflow Is Killing It (observer.com)
239.
Hacker News app for Android (with login, voting, and commenting) (etc.jazzychad.net)
240.
A brief glimpse of Nokia's popularity outside the Western world (downloadsquad.switched.com)