August 2008 Archive
1711.
Dave Winer asks: "Could Vista Fail?" (scripting.com)
1712.
Kites could provide electricity for 100,000 homes (physorg.com)
1713.
Build Status Interfaces (globalnerdy.com)
1714.
Japan’s super-advanced mobile web: Too unique to serve as a global blueprint? (techcrunch.com)
1715.
Who said elevator pitches have to be simple? (blog.palantirtech.com)
1716.
Venture Capital Legal Document Standardization and Costs (thestartuplawyer.com)
1717.
Some Web Firms Say They Track Behavior Without Explicit Consent (washingtonpost.com)
1718.
We feel your pain, and we're sorry (gmailblog.blogspot.com)
1719.
World of Development: academic paper on gold farming as an economic development activity (salon.com)
1720.
The decision to advertise (blog.businessofsoftware.org)
1721.
Living Things (einfall.wordpress.com)
1722.
Judge refuses to lift gag order on MIT students in Boston subway-hack case (computerworld.com)
1723.
A useful flex regex tool (gskinner.com)
1724.
The Logistic Map, Chaos and Bifurcation Diagrams (en.wikipedia.org)
1725.
Top 7 Internet TV Startups (sramanamitra.com)
1726.
At School, Technology Starts to Turn a Corner (nytimes.com)
1727.
Pandora’s Woes: RIAA Would Rather Artists Make Nothing (theoutsidr.com)
1728.
The Dark Underbelly of Holy Shit (randsinrepose.com)
1729.
Journey to Python Part 2: Input, Output, and Documentation (tuxtips.org)
1730.
5 Productivity Apps For The iPhone (sitepoint.com)
1731.
Fee increases for Delware incorporated Companies (legis.delaware.gov)
1732.
Text Wizardry : Ten Commands (gurge.com)
1733.
Workarounds - Leading Edge of Innovation (Don Norman's) (jnd.org)
1734.
Weight as Main Measure of Health May Be Misguided (nytimes.com)
1735.
Intel, Yahoo to Offer Software for Web Access on TV (bloomberg.com)
1736.
Maths on a plane (plus.maths.org)
1737.
Gruber: Raining on the OpenClip Parade (daringfireball.net)
1738.
Ask YC: Obama Saying "Developers" ? ()
1739.
Microsoft patents 'navigating paginated content in page-based increments' (patft.uspto.gov)
1740.
Study predicts undecided voters with 70% accuracy (latimes.com)