June 2012 Archive
18511.
Chrome on iOS is sluggish, but at least it syncs (extremetech.com)
18512.
Modbook Pro: Pen-based OS X tablet returns as a converted 13-inch MacBook Pro (9to5mac.com)
18513.
C/ะก++ Twitter (only links to interesting articles) (twitter.com)
18514.
HTC Inspire 4G Review | HTC Inspire 4G AT&T (technreviews.com)
18515.
How To Set Chrome Browser As Default On iPhone[Jailbreak & Non-Jailbreak Tweaks] (icosmogeek.com)
18516.
Blabber against PHP (aniketpant.com)
18517.
How to Work with HashTable using Csharp and ASP.NET (mrbool.com)
18518.
Is Facebook testing a Want button? (mashable.com)
18519.
Dieter Rams: principles for good design (vitsoe.com)
18520.
Oil Prices Explode Higher, Biggest Gain In 3 Years (businessinsider.com)
18521.
Is this a bug in Firefox's 3D transform implementation? (stackoverflow.com)
18522.
Chinese astronauts parachute land after mission (usatoday.com)
18523.
Sure Ingredients To Achieving Goals (productivitybits.com)
18524.
Customizable cheat sheet system for OS X (ttscoff.github.com)
18525.
Why two heads are better than one (frankjwu.com)
18526.
Vital Signs (sciencebasedmedicine.org)
18527.
BlueStacks brings Android apps to OS X (engadget.com)
18528.
Number of Serious Web Vulnerabilities Dropped in 2011 (securityweek.com)
18529.
Betting On The Gold Standard? Odds Are Still Long (npr.org)
18530.
ServiceNow soars in NYSE debut (nasdaq.com)
18531.
Yahoo Shuts Down Koprol Check-In Service (ebm.cheetahmail.com)
18532.
The 7 deadly sins of software development (gigaom.com)
18533.
Blackberry now ships with WebKit [2010] (crn.com)
18534.
How Computers Have Actually Fueled Our Dependency on Office Paper (environmentalgraffiti.com)
18535.
The unresolved questions of science (technocrates.org)
18536.
ReBranding Canada, Educating United States (thetorontoegotist.com)
18537.
Why Downcast (leancrew.com)
18538.
Plugin for Facebook-style link embedding right in gmail (chrome.google.com)
18539.
Real-world cyrptography - Implementing SSL/TLS (commandlinefanatic.com)
18540.
New espionage malware campaign targets users of Windows & Macs (arstechnica.com)