February 2012 Archive
391.
Tim Berners-Lee Takes the Stand to Keep the Web Free (wired.com)
392.
If you're using Node.js, you're doing life wrong (codeslinger.posterous.com)
393.
HyperDex: A Searchable Distributed Key-Value Store (hyperdex.org)
394.
The Pirate Bay's Peter Sunde: It's evolution, stupid (wired.co.uk)
395.
Simplified Sign-Up and Log-In Flows (sachagreif.com)
396.
Learn from Haskell - Functional, Reusable JavaScript (seanhess.github.com)
397.
Brainstorming Doesn't Really Work (newyorker.com)
398.
Node.native - Node.js in C++0x (github.com)
399.
Takedowns run amok? The strange Secret Service/GoDaddy assault on JotForm (arstechnica.com)
400.
The New York Times just stole our column. Should we sue? (blog.thephoenix.com)
401.
YSlow is now open source (github.com)
402.
Mechanical Turk Stations for the Urban Poor (chrismaury.com)
403.
The Zuckerberg Tax (nytimes.com)
404.
Why Trigger.io doesn’t use PhoneGap – 5x faster native bridge (trigger.io)
405.
How to Hustle SXSW for Fun & Profit (daniellemorrill.com)
406.
Berkeley Computer Vision Class (vision-class.org)
407.
The town is no longer friendly for business (swombat.com)
408.
Do you like online privacy? You may be a terrorist (publicintelligence.net)
409.
How PayPal and Apple’s Fraud Policies Punish the Honest User (lockergnome.com)
410.
It’s Just Math (raganwald.posterous.com)
411.
US Government: You're Scaring Web Businesses Into Moving Out Of The US (techdirt.com)
412.
Atea: a free minimalistic status bar time tracker for MacOS in Clojure (github.com)
413.
Rich Dad Poor Dad... Worst Personal Finance Book of All Time? (finchblogs.com)
414.
How to Find Facebook Users on Match.com by Using Face Recognition Tools (artemyankov.com)
415.
How to do cheap backups (code.mixpanel.com)
416.
Show HN: my weekend project, PageBlox (pageblox.com)
417.
Code is indeed poetry: Van Gogh's Starry Night comes to Life (thenextweb.com)
418.
CoffeeScript Under Pressure (mattdw.github.com)
419.
Can guys in coffeeshops compete with celebrity entrepreneurs? (remarkedly.com)
420.
Oracle v. Google: "the value of this case keeps getting smaller and smaller" (groklaw.net)