October 2011 Archive
601.
SimpleGeo To Be Acquired By Urban Airship (uncrunched.com)
602.
YC Application Checklist (apps due in 1 week) (giftrocket.com)
603.
Ask HN: What Android apps do you use?
604.
Google now has its own Beer (pcworld.com)
605.
The Fans Are All Right (blog.pinboard.in)
606.
3D Cube World Level Generation (accidentalnoise.sourceforge.net)
607.
From South Africa, a faster and easier way to apply condoms (springwise.com)
608.
iPhone 4S Pre-Orders Top One Million in First 24 Hours (apple.com)
609.
Buy a home, get a US visa, Senators propose (bottomline.msnbc.msn.com)
610.
In defence of Objective-C (splinter.com.au)
611.
Dropbox Easter Egg? (forums.dropbox.com)
612.
Quake's Fast Inverse Square Root (betterexplained.com)
613.
Gitbox 1.5: native undo for git operations (gitboxapp.com)
614.
A Quick Look Into The Math Of Animations With JavaScript (coding.smashingmagazine.com)
615.
Require.js + Backbone.js = Robust Modular Application Development (backbonetutorials.com)
616.
The iPhone 4S Has Been Jailbroken (iclarified.com)
617.
Facebook: Are You Interfacing with the Russian Mafia & KGB? (2010) (thenewamerican.com)
618.
The Missed Red Flags on Groupon (dealbook.nytimes.com)
619.
Closed access means people die (blogs.ch.cam.ac.uk)
620.
John McCarthy's website where you can find all of his papers (www-formal.stanford.edu)
621.
Maxing out your Dropbox referrals (how I got 16GB for less than $10) (vladik.rikhter.org)
622.
Tesla’s Musk Says Model S Sold Out; Should Turn Profit in 2013 (bloomberg.com)
623.
Free JSON API to instantly check the spam score of your email messages (spamcheck.postmarkapp.com)
624.
Clojure's Webframework "Noir" hits 1.2.0 (github.com)
625.
Quicksilver Roars (new features, Lion support) (lovequicksilver.com)
626.
Occupying Wall Street (newstatesman.com)
627.
Why Germany seems not to want a quick fix for the euro crisis (economist.com)
628.
Punchd - A Loyalty Program (from Google) (getpunchd.com)
629.
DARPA: reconstruct shredded documents, win $50,000 (shredderchallenge.com)
630.
Don’t look now, but AWS might be a billion-dollar biz (gigaom.com)