October 2007 Archive
631.
The Microsoft Machine Keeps Chugging Along (techcrunch.com)
632.
How To Make Your Own TinyURL service (blog.htmlcenter.com)
633.
VC's Billion-Dollar Secrets (forbes.com)
634.
Another New Wrinkle In User Interfaces (mikeschaffner.typepad.com)
635.
Plotr: a CSS / Javascript Graph framework based on Prototype (solutoire.com)
636.
The sometimes precarious business models for Open Source software (inthebox.webmin.com)
637.
Facebook's real purpose (phdcomics.com)
638.
Feedback requested on an idea to simplify entering locations on GPS devices (jgc.org)
639.
More Thoughts on "Enterprise Software's Youth Drain" (blog.charleshudson.net)
640.
How Magicians Protect Their Tricks -- One Take on IP of Ideas (slate.com)
641.
Unexpected Marketing (or The Power of Enjoy your Workplace) (blog.fastcompany.com)
642.
Apple's U.S. market share rises to 8.1%, up from 6.2% a year ago (appleinsider.com)
643.
I Was a Hacker for the MPAA (wired.com)
644.
Touching on Apple's Mouseless Future - Is Apple about to kill mouse? (unboundedition.com)
645.
Sunlight cuts risk of many cancers (news.independent.co.uk)
646.
Note To Criminals -- Don't Call Tech Support (arstechnica.com)
647.
Platforms Want To Be Free (roughtype.com)
648.
Why Is Apple Being So Lame About iPhone Hacking? (slate.com)
649.
Playing Your Hand With Your Cards Turned Up (avc.blogs.com)
650.
Dot-com fever stirs sense of deja vu (iht.com)
651.
Sample VC Legal Templates (nvca.org)
652.
RadioLab: Great set of science podcasts to listen to while you are running. (wnyc.org)
653.
Keep Your Startup Co-Founder Closer (thestartuplawyer.com)
654.
Startups On Steroids (statesman.com)
655.
Twitter is low-expectation IRC (radar.oreilly.com)
656.
Microsoft hard at work getting Windows to run on OLPC computers (reuters.com)
657.
Whither the Renaissance Man? (technologyreview.com)
658.
SafariWatir: The Watir Driver for Safari (test your Rails apps automatically in Safari) (safariwatir.rubyforge.org)
659.
CSS Diagrams (surfare.net)
660.
Prof. Randy Pausch's last lecture: Really Achieving Your Childhood Dreams (video, full talk) (video.google.com)