2011 Archive
7141.
Show HN: Taking the Emmys by Storm (screencast on how to develop with Storm) (storm.twitsprout.com)
7142.
An Annoying Open Problem (rjlipton.wordpress.com)
7143.
Insights on the Y Combinator interview (rtabl.es)
7144.
8 bit crop circle hack (dailygrail.com)
7145.
Vibrations Invisible to the Human Eye Shot at 1,000 Frames Per Second (petapixel.com)
7146.
Dive Into 2010: HTML5 Book Reflection (diveintomark.org)
7147.
Rumors of Tor's compromise are greatly exaggerated (blog.torproject.org)
7148.
A Brief Overview of the Clojure Web Stack (brehaut.net)
7149.
Dmr: Odd Comments and Strange Doings in Unix (cm.bell-labs.com)
7150.
Minecraft.Print() (minecraftprint.com)
7151.
The Recording Industry Likes to Make Me Look Like an Asshole (blog.earbits.com)
7152.
The Fat Trap: Our Bodies Are Fighting Against Us (nytimes.com)
7153.
Giving up on Ruby packaging (lucas-nussbaum.net)
7154.
Poll: How many generations removed are you from immigration?
7155.
RMS on evil developers, spying social networks, the legitimacy of Anonymous (rt.com)
7156.
Return of the Mac (2005) (paulgraham.com)
7157.
Lab-grown meat might be only 6 months away (blastr.com)
7158.
Detroit is Dying… Quickly (freakonomics.com)
7159.
Research Chef: You’re Not Allergic to MSG and More Culinary Secrets (chow.com)
7160.
HTML5 Is An Oncoming Train, Native App Development An Oncoming Rocket Ship (techcrunch.com)
7161.
Ask HN: Help, my $150,000 student debt is ruining my life, and my future
7162.
Insecurity in the Jungle (disk) (daemonology.net)
7163.
I hope IPv6 never catches on (apenwarr.ca)
7164.
Who holds the copyright to a picture taken by a monkey? (boingboing.net)
7165.
Diaspora - Moving Forward (blog.joindiaspora.com)
7166.
Why Mobile Apps Will Soon be Dead (technologyreview.com)
7167.
Why We Threw out All Our Code (And Why You Should Too) (blog.nowjs.com)
7168.
IPad 2 JailBreakMe (3.0) now available (jailbreakme.com)
7169.
The right to dual-boot: Linux groups plead case prior to Windows 8 launch (arstechnica.com)
7170.
Kinect is fastest-selling consumer electronics device in history (venturebeat.com)