July 2008 Archive
3181.
Brain Cell / The Universe (sprott.physics.wisc.edu)
3182.
Hydrogen - Without The Nasty Carbon Footprint (scientificblogging.com)
3183.
Qualities of An Ideal Opportunity (blog.bincsearch.com)
3184.
TI battery charger achieves faster, cooler charging in mobile phones, portable electronics (news.emcelettronica.com)
3185.
Why Hacking Exists (modicus.blogspot.com)
3186.
Monkey Patching For Robots (involution.com)
3187.
How to make a Silicon Valley in Europe (bulletin.sciencebusiness.net)
3188.
Bad News For The Kindle: iPhone 3G + Apps (alleyinsider.com)
3189.
Guitar Hero 2.0 (ripten.com)
3190.
Gmail Reveals the Names of All Users (blog.holdenkarau.com)
3191.
Ask HN : Robot kits other than Mindstorms? ()
3192.
Hardware Random Number Generator Useful (foo.be)
3193.
Gartner analyst predicts the demise of the mouse in 3-5 years (news.bbc.co.uk)
3194.
It's Official: Sirius-XM Gets Thumbs Up From FCC (Finally) (alleyinsider.com)
3195.
World's most economically powerful cities (forbes.com)
3196.
A Million Thoughts (amillionthoughts.com)
3197.
Yahoo: Carl Icahn isn't just a tech-ignorant speculator - he's a bad speculator (alleyinsider.com)
3198.
WardsWiki (c2.com)
3199.
Don't settle: Get what you want, right now (bart.whahay.net)
3200.
Search Advertising On Google Offers Lowest ROI (internetrack.blogspot.com)
3201.
Microsoft Searches Jump 15% After Live Cashback Launch (techcrunch.com)
3202.
Why podcasting is failing, part II: Lessons from PodTech (thestandard.com)
3203.
Amazing Stat: California Uses More Gas than China (blog.wired.com)
3204.
Study: IT jobs will drop in 2009 (infoworld.com)
3205.
Imagine... (a slew of startup ideas in the spirit of PG's "being good") (worldchanging.com)
3206.
Ruby Streams (jpalardy.blogspot.com)
3207.
Can Machines Think? Interaction and Perspective Taking with Robots Investigated via fMRI (plosone.org)
3208.
Ubisoft Steals ‘No-CD Crack’ to Fix Rainbox 6: Vegas 2 (torrentfreak.com)
3209.
More reasons to launch early and often. (amemototheinternet.com)
3210.
The Siberian Blast (or the Tunguska event) Visualized in a Supercomputer (ngm.nationalgeographic.com)