August 2011 Archive
991.
The real story behind the Java 7 GA bugs affecting Apache Lucene / Solr (blog.thetaphi.de)
992.
On forgetting the remember me checkbox. (openideas.ideon.co)
993.
GNOME-Designer Jon McCann about the future of GNOME3 (derstandard.at)
994.
PVS-Studio vs Clang (software.intel.com)
995.
What Your Old Graphing Calculator Says About Technology (theatlantic.com)
996.
Jonathan Stark responds to Sam Odio (jonathanstark.com)
997.
Why McDonald's wins in any economy (management.fortune.cnn.com)
998.
The See-Invisibility Exploit in Games: How it works (shenglong.posterous.com)
999.
Initial Thoughts on Clojure (acooke.org)
1000.
How Old Is Your Globe? (replogleglobes.com)
1001.
The ultimate cross platform language (lambdabrella.blogspot.com)
1002.
Lies of B-School (forbes.com)
1003.
A new kind of interchange eliminates left turns. (slate.com)
1004.
Google+ invite links aren't showing up on Facebook news feeds (plus.google.com)
1005.
Oracle's 'APIs are copyrightable' defense = nightmare for programmers (itworld.com)
1006.
Hacker CS: Computer Science Challenges (hackercs.com)
1007.
Happy WiFi day 8.02.11, the most exclusive holiday ever (spideroak.com)
1008.
Judge to Oracle: "proceed with caution before overreaching again" (patent-damages.com)
1009.
MonaOS: the OO hobby OS with a GUI, Scheme, browser, and more (monaos.org)
1010.
Where do users look first? (gazehawk.com)
1011.
Rebuilder of Colossus, Tony Sale, dies (bbc.co.uk)
1012.
How Parse wants to make mobile backends easy (video) (gigaom.com)
1013.
The Terrible Cost Of Patents (techcrunch.com)
1014.
Introducing Apache Mahout (ibm.com)
1015.
Introducing Clojure to an Organisation (oobaloo.co.uk)
1016.
Parse (YC S11): A look at life inside Y Combinator from a two-time alumnus (venturebeat.com)
1017.
A Git user’s first (and hopefully last) foray into SVN-land (blog.garlicsim.org)
1018.
Diablo 3 Real Money Auction House Details (ausgamers.com)
1019.
The pros and cons of developing a complete Javascript UI (devblog.supportbee.com)
1020.
Official KISSmetrics Response to Data Collection Practices (blog.kissmetrics.com)