October 2007 Archive
961.
Why Nokia Won't Beat Apple's iPhone (alleyinsider.com)
962.
How Baboons Think (nytimes.com)
963.
Why RSS is Broken (and how to fix it) (centernetworks.com)
964.
Ask YC: How do non-developers with a startup plan to find a developer to help put it on the web? ()
965.
Ask YC: Good Lisp Hosts? ()
966.
It's all Market Research. There isn't and won't be a bubble. ()
967.
Chinese search engines "hijacked" - confirmed by multiple sources (breitbart.com)
968.
"They Would Be Gods" (taken down from ycombinator -- now hosted by scribd) (scribd.com)
969.
How the Mighty Fall? Yahoo's Embarrassing Web Errors (baselinemag.com)
970.
A Few Important Concerns From the Facebook App O'Reilly Report (centernetworks.com)
971.
The Atom Publishing Protocol is now RFC 5023 (ietf.org)
972.
Developing a modular, nanoparticle drug delivery system (biologynews.net)
973.
Automatic cameraman: automatic camera control by tracking voice signals (youtube.com)
974.
MySpace To Open Office In San Francisco (webpronews.com)
975.
Jester: JavaScript implementation of REST (thoughtbot.com)
976.
Inside The Matrix for Mobiles (wired.com)
977.
10 things you can ask a co-founder but not an employee (blogs.techrepublic.com.com)
978.
Whois May Be Retired, Says ICANN (readwriteweb.com)
979.
Narayana Murthy's dream for the future (im.rediff.com)
980.
Social networking and the Geocities fallacy (blog.pmarca.com)
981.
CNET Founder Shelby Bonnie Unveils His New Startup: PoliticalBase (techcrunch.com)
982.
NAND Storage at DRAM speeds. 800Mp/s (fusionio.com)
983.
Five alternative business models for the music industry (last100.com)
984.
Internet Recession Watch: Falling Ads, Taxes, Housing (alleyinsider.com)
985.
Are Private High Schools Better Academically Than Public High Schools? (cep-dc.org)
986.
What if C.E.O. Pay Is Fair? (nytimes.com)
987.
Power an LED light from your phone line for free (metacafe.com)
988.
Making a picture website from Picurls.com (catonmat.net)
989.
Should HotorNot Become Just a Facebook App? (techcrunch.com)
990.
Yahoo: Bringing Geeky Back (businessweek.com)