June 2009 Archive
481.
You can now share files on FriendFeed (blog.friendfeed.com)
482.
Java's Original Sin (gbracha.blogspot.com)
483.
New Nintendo DS Game -- Create Any Object You Can Think Of (joystiq.com)
484.
How to find new startup ideas? The answer is in the question. (killall.dashnine.org)
485.
Alan Cox: How I ported Linux to the 68k Macintosh (linux.org.uk)
486.
Hypercritical (arstechnica.com)
487.
Hidden Features Of Perl, PHP, Javascript, C, C++, C#, Java, Ruby, Python, Others (beerpla.net)
488.
Apple Says Jobs Has Returned to Work (nytimes.com)
489.
YC Add-on Collection for Firefox (addons.mozilla.org)
490.
Ask HN: Have you ever felt inferior for not being from a name-brand college? ()
491.
Ha, burnouts, stress, jobs, efficiency. It's just a ride. (tehomet.net)
492.
Microsoft Internet Explorer 8 at the height of cynicism (factoryjoe.com)
493.
Obama Calls For Regulation Of Venture Capital (blogs.wsj.com)
494.
AppJet's free hosting (AppJet 1.0) being discontinued (appjet.com)
495.
MySpace’s Tom Gets $500k Per Year to Stop Coming to Work (mashable.com)
496.
Japanese camera buff builds 130-megapixel scanner camera for next to nothing (bouncingredball.com)
497.
The Wrong Level of Abstraction (codinghorror.com)
498.
Anecdote Driven Development, or Why I Don't Do TDD (use.perl.org)
499.
There, I Fixed It (thereifixedit.com)
500.
Generating a Digital TV signal with nothing but a VGA card (bellard.org)
501.
Why A Low Calorie Diet Extends Lifespans: Critical Enzyme Pair Identified (sciencedaily.com)
502.
People who live in older, walkable neighborhoods have better health (well.blogs.nytimes.com)
503.
I'll give away one of my startups to someone on HN ()
504.
Why China Isn’t “The Next Silicon Valley” (techcrunch.com)
505.
Interactive NYC Homicide Map (projects.nytimes.com)
506.
A week without Google Search (jgc.org)
507.
Ask HN: What web/desktop apps do you use to manage your startup? ()
508.
How to succeed or fail on a frontier (unenumerated.blogspot.com)
509.
Making things work (nytimes.com)
510.
Bit.ly’s Grand Plans, And Their Inevitable Clash With Digg: Bitly Now (techcrunch.com)