February 2012 Archive
181.
Aussies' fix for 'stagnated' email (smh.com.au)
182.
Study Finds Engineers Far More Likely than MBAs to Build and Run Companies (blog.identified.com)
183.
A Classic Startup Horror Story (venturebeat.com)
184.
Tesla responds to "bricking" issue (teslamotors.com)
185.
Why Don't Americans Elect Scientists? (campaignstops.blogs.nytimes.com)
186.
Books every self-taught computer scientist should read (eric.themoritzfamily.com)
187.
Double Fine raises $1m in less than 24hrs on Kickstarter (kickstarter.com)
188.
Best Resume Ever: How to Woo a Startup (blog.ridejoy.com)
189.
A re-introduction to JavaScript (developer.mozilla.org)
190.
Fast enough VMs in fast enough time (tratt.net)
191.
The story of the hardest platform game ever (pwnee.com)
192.
Sample App with Backbone.js and Twitter Bootstrap (coenraets.org)
193.
Why do self-respecting hackers use Gmail & Co? (laforge.gnumonks.org)
194.
Udacity to offer entire CS curriculum, certifications to obtain a degree online (plus.google.com)
195.
Ask HN: What are the good old ideas that still make money on the web?
196.
The Sun is Setting on Rails-style MVC Frameworks (caines.ca)
197.
Rapportive (YC S10) Has Been Acquired By LinkedIn (blog.rapportive.com)
198.
UK chemist on Elsevier's ban on textmining (blogs.ch.cam.ac.uk)
199.
Standing invitation: if you want to talk software, I want to talk to you (kalzumeus.com)
200.
Tower.js - JavaScript Framework for Node.js modeled after Ruby on Rails (towerjs.org)
201.
The 'Undue Weight' of Truth on Wikipedia (chronicle.com)
202.
Meetings: Where Work Goes to Die (codinghorror.com)
203.
Why Concatenative Programming Matters (evincarofautumn.blogspot.com)
204.
The sociology of drinking (gladwell.com)
205.
About normalize.css: a modern, HTML5-ready alternative to CSS resets (nicolasgallagher.com)
206.
Modafinil and Startups (swombat.com)
207.
A $5000 Chair (battlehardened.wordpress.com)
208.
Star Trek as a purely symbolic artifact of past times (antipope.org)
209.
Paul Graham: Why Y Combinator Replaces The Traditional Corporation (fastcompany.com)
210.
Reuters totally clueless about the meaning of "hacking" (reuters.com)