May 2009 Archive
601.
Adam D'Angelo, former Facebook CTO starts new company: Alma Networks (alma-networks.com)
602.
Urwid - Console User Interface Library for Python (excess.org)
603.
Smeed's law (en.wikipedia.org)
604.
Fibers & Cooperative Scheduling in Ruby (igvita.com)
605.
EuroDjangoCon Presentations (eurodjangocon.pbworks.com)
606.
Yardbird - building IRC bots with Django (zork.net)
607.
Ask HN: No-names, tell your story on how you got PR coverage ()
608.
Is anyone actually using Xcode? (warpspire.com)
609.
Ask Freelancers: How much do you charge? ()
610.
How Harvard University Almost Destroyed Itself (business.theatlantic.com)
611.
The Post Mortem of a Venture-backed Start-up (timetogetstarted.wordpress.com)
612.
Opera 10 Browser UA string format changed to accomodate bad applications (dev.opera.com)
613.
What does a programmer have to barter with? (blog.aisleten.com)
614.
How the Web and the Weblog have changed Writing (philip.greenspun.com)
615.
V.I. Arnold: On teaching mathematics (pauli.uni-muenster.de)
616.
Plugging In $40 Computers (bits.blogs.nytimes.com)
617.
Kon-Boot CD:110KB Floppy image/CD ISO to remove your Windows admin and Linux root pwd (piotrbania.com)
618.
17th century Damascus sabres contained carbon nanotubes (rsc.org)
619.
Blame baby monitors, not congestion, for your WiFi woes (arstechnica.com)
620.
'Youth Magnet' Cities Hit Midlife Crisis (online.wsj.com)
621.
Why Gene Patents Are Unlawful (blog.aclu.org)
622.
Steve Blank: Founders and dysfunctional families (steveblank.com)
623.
Freshman Economics Won't Quite Be the Same (nytimes.com)
624.
Zero-Knowledge Sudoku: Verifying solution without looking at it. (blog.computationalcomplexity.org)
625.
Ask HN: IRC channel for Hacker News? ()
626.
A Technical Look at Google Wave (gaborcselle.com)
627.
Duke Nukem Forever gameplay Leaked (gametrailers.com)
628.
Ward Cunningham: The Simplest Thing that Could Possibly Work (artima.com)
629.
Humans are driven to endlessly acquire. (seedmagazine.com)
630.
Life’s First Spark Re-Created in the Laboratory (wired.com)