July 2011 Archive
1.
Airbnb Nightmare: No End In Sight (ejroundtheworld.blogspot.com)
2.
Violated: A traveler’s lost faith, a difficult lesson learned (ejroundtheworld.blogspot.com)
3.
Chosen: A javascript plug-in that makes long select boxes user-friendly. (harvesthq.github.com)
4.
33GB of public domain JSTOR articles, and a manifesto (thepiratebay.org)
5.
Bored People Quit (randsinrepose.com)
6.
A lesson on the importance of encouraging your children with their projects (gamesbyemail.com)
7.
You are not running out of time (rahulbijlani.com)
8.
Why I will never pursue cheating again (behind-the-enemy-lines.blogspot.com)
9.
Aaronsw indicted for hacking MIT network to download millions of JSTOR docs (documentcloud.org)
10.
Google made my son cry (sunpig.com)
11.
Matz (creator of Ruby) joins Heroku (blog.heroku.com)
12.
Steve Yegge quits Google in the middle of his speech [OSCON Data 2011] (youtube.com)
13.
Nobody Understands REST or HTTP (blog.steveklabnik.com)
14.
User testing in the wild: he has never used a computer (jboriss.wordpress.com)
15.
Greece defaults (blogs.reuters.com)
16.
How The Hell Is This My Fault? (techcrunch.com)
17.
How Running A Business Changes The Way You Think (kalzumeus.com)
18.
Webdesigners: please make text readable (contrastrebellion.com)
19.
A pound of flesh: how Cisco's "unmitigated gall" derailed one man's life (arstechnica.com)
20.
XKCD's Randall Munroe on Google+ requiring your gender to be public (plus.google.com)
21.
Nginx established as a company (nginx.org)
22.
Anonymous & Lulz Security Statement to the FBI (pastebin.com)
23.
Remove any Site From Google (even if you don't control it) (jamesbreckenridge.co.uk)
24.
Code.Google.com now supports git (code.google.com)
25.
What every programmer should know about time (unix4lyfe.org)
26.
The Brilliance of Dwarf Fortress (nytimes.com)
27.
Ex-Wave, Ex-Plus engineer on Google Plus (rethrick.com)
28.
When Patents Attack (npr.org)
29.
Warren Buffett: I could end the deficit in 5 minutes. (ritholtz.com)
30.
The Moment Of Truth For Airbnb As User’s Home Is Utterly Trashed (techcrunch.com)