April 2012 Archive
1591.
Finding the problem is the hard part (ecorner.stanford.edu)
1592.
Securing Data in iOS (blog.chariotsolutions.com)
1593.
First superradiant lasers produce nearly no photons (and that's expected) (arstechnica.com)
1594.
'Prince of Persia' creator Jordan Mechner on telling stories in 48k or less (theverge.com)
1595.
Bridging the Culture Gap Between Content and Coding (jennifer8lee.com)
1596.
10gen CTO Eliot Horowitz on the Rise of MongoDB (betabeat.com)
1597.
Food's Biggest Scam: The Great Kobe Beef Lie (forbes.com)
1598.
Seattle Rex vs. Apple: The Verdict Is In (seattlerex.com)
1599.
A Concise Introduction to 4 Ways to Start Your MongoDB (architects.dzone.com)
1600.
Dropbox referrals are now twice as nice (blog.dropbox.com)
1601.
Graphs - When 2D is not enough, Three.js and Neo4J (maxdemarzi.com)
1602.
Sony vs Anonymous: The man who started the hacker wars (newyorker.com)
1603.
Nokia’s Lumia line ‘not good enough’ to battle iOS and Android, say carriers (venturebeat.com)
1604.
Why artificially limit your code to C? (stackoverflow.com)
1605.
Another Look at "The Limits to Growth" (smithsonianmag.com)
1606.
A Better HN: Aligned (natewienert.com)
1607.
Job Posts That Sell (jamiequint.com)
1608.
One-Third of O2 Staff say They are More Productive Working From Home (blogs.wsj.com)
1609.
Ex-Con Man Says JOBS Law Makes Guys Like Him Rich (bloomberg.com)
1610.
Show HN: ChargeBee - Recurring Billing (chargebee.com)
1611.
DCPU16 Assembler in less than 200 lines of Ruby (github.com)
1612.
Zepto goes semicolon-free (mir.aculo.us)
1613.
USPS gets into the SPAM business (usps.com)
1614.
Introduction to ASP.NET Web API (blog.filipekberg.se)
1615.
This is how graphics in games matter (pocketnext.com)
1616.
Lego's packing process isn't perfect (alex-ionescu.com)
1617.
'Supersizing' the College Classroom: How One Instructor Teaches 2,670 Students (chronicle.com)
1618.
Only 8+ Years of Rails Experience Required (jobs.37signals.com)
1619.
Show HN: Simplest way to engage with your mobile app users (appstark.com)
1620.
Technical Books Are Broken (asymptomatic.net)