October 2010 Archive
4921.
Engineers Blindsided By COICA Bill Under Review by Senate (foxnews.com)
4922.
Most Tweets Produce Zero Replies or Retweets (mashable.com)
4923.
Showing email inbox queue on contact page (ma.tt)
4924.
Google updates its Privacy Policies (google.com)
4925.
A&P turns $0.88 of postage into 200k uniques (blog.locately.com)
4926.
Feminism and Microcontrollers: Building new clubhouses with the LilyPad Arduino (mako.cc)
4927.
An Area 51 Apology — and Clarification (blog.stackoverflow.com)
4928.
Mythbusting “HTML 5 Did Not Kill Flash” - Flash Player version 258.1 plausible? (wahlers.com.br)
4929.
Vinod Khosla: CEOs Should Spend More Than 50% Of Their Time Recruiting (TCTV) (techcrunch.com)
4930.
H-P's Apotheker Challenge: Don't Mess Anything Up (online.wsj.com)
4931.
The Ins and Outs of CSS Resets (msdn.microsoft.com)
4932.
Cool Facebook Page Bug (vinhboy.com)
4933.
Microsoft’s Secret Acquisition Spree (paidcontent.org)
4934.
Google's WebP Image Format (asserttrue.blogspot.com)
4935.
"Thinking Hard About the Future" - Tim O'Reilly (youtube.com)
4936.
Was Clinton wrong about Russian-Israelis being 'right'? (mideast.foreignpolicy.com)
4937.
Tell HN: Early-bird registration closes for the MathsJam ()
4938.
Women in Science (philip.greenspun.com)
4939.
How to Make Your Product Images Beautiful With the Rule of Thirds (uxmovement.com)
4940.
Laptop stand for sitting/standing (Nottable) (gizmodo.com)
4941.
47% Americans never retire (247wallst.com)
4942.
If Women Had Designed Facebook (authenticorganizations.com)
4943.
At Risk From the Womb (nytimes.com)
4944.
Evan Davis meets Warren Buffett - 1 of 6 (youtube.com)
4945.
Ruby, C, and Java are pass-by-value, Perl is pass-by-reference (advogato.org)
4946.
Being Contrarian is About to Go Mainstream (feld.com)
4947.
Best analysis of fractional reserve banking ever (youtube.com)
4948.
The slippery slope to obesity (newscientist.com)
4949.
Spotting vaporware: three follies of would-be technologists (scottlocklin.wordpress.com)
4950.
Demo or Die! You're a teen hacker, you want to impress, you demo code (1995) (wired.com)