June 2009 Archive
1321.
Google PowerMeter (google.org)
1322.
A computer science professor's never-ending H-1B fight (computerworld.com)
1323.
MythBuster's Adam Savage complains about $11K data roamining bill on Twitter (techcrunch.com)
1324.
Amazon’s EC2 Service Suffers Outage (gigaom.com)
1325.
Throwing some light on NP-completeness and the P=NP problem (unknownprogrammer.com)
1326.
Myths about JavaFX, Android, and J2ME (bitsandbuzz.com)
1327.
Two Japanese detained in Italy with $139 *billion* in US Treasury bonds (japantoday.com)
1328.
Ubuntu licensing dispute resolved in satanists' favor. (neowin.net)
1329.
The Revenge of Smalltalk (news.squeak.org)
1330.
Bad news for IBM and Apple (thenextweb.com)
1331.
Why Not Try A Scientific Approach To Science Education? (scientificblogging.com)
1332.
The Fabulous Fraudulent Life of Jocelyn and Ed (2008) (rollingstone.com)
1333.
MVC: No Silver Bullet (andywardley.com)
1334.
DOM Traversal in Firefox 3.5 (hacks.mozilla.org)
1335.
A hacker tourist explores Cheyenne Mountain (fas.org)
1336.
In Memoriam: George Carlin, 7 Words You Can Say on Twitter (carlin.twistori.com)
1337.
As VCs look for liquidity, private-company stock exchanges are emerging (vator.tv)
1338.
U.C. Berkeley Device Could Store Data for Billion Years (foxnews.com)
1339.
Caterina Fake's Hunch.com is already redefining 'decision engine' (latimesblogs.latimes.com)
1340.
Ruby daemons using RobustThread (superjared.com)
1341.
Take Your Design To The Next Level With CSS3 (smashingmagazine.com)
1342.
NASA Wants Your Ideas for Digitizing Rocket Scientist’s Notes (wired.com)
1343.
MagicJack revenue more than $100 million/year (latestgeeknews.blogspot.com)
1344.
A 12-Foot Raised Floor? (datacenterknowledge.com)
1345.
Startup 126: Term Sheet - Anti-Dilution (ansanelli.com)
1346.
Best advice: Gates on Gates (money.cnn.com)
1347.
How to automate EC2 instance setup with user-data scripts (alestic.com)
1348.
Visualization of the Netflix Database (magamaps.com)
1349.
CBS Eyes Live Video Edge with Ustream (mashable.com)
1350.
Privacy study shows Google’s eyes are everywhere (bizjournals.com)