July 2012 Archive
4651.
For first time ever, US seeking international limits on copyright (arstechnica.com)
4652.
World’s Most Impressive Paper Planes (wired.com)
4653.
Criminalizing links: Why the Richard O’Dwyer case matters (gigaom.com)
4654.
What's Next for Starbucks? (timgaweco.com)
4655.
A Brief History of Money (spectrum.ieee.org)
4656.
Quantum Computers Possibly Aided By Diamond (thebunsenburner.com)
4657.
New Orleans Residents: Dear Google, It’s Time To Update Our Street View Images (searchengineland.com)
4658.
Responsive Web Design circa 1999 (youtube.com)
4659.
Better SAAS Pricing Strategies (zaru.co)
4660.
Google threatening youtube-mp3 (youtube-mp3.org)
4661.
Solve Small Problems (jasonvanlue.com)
4662.
Emacs Rocks Episode 11 - swank-js (emacsrocks.com)
4663.
Code Style Guide for the English Language, by William Strunk Jr. (bartleby.com)
4664.
Remember When Google Was A Search Engine? (techcrunch.com)
4665.
Corecursion, codata, learning by teaching (blog.daniellobato.me)
4666.
Ray Kurzweil on Artificial Intelligence, Nanotechnology and More (online.wsj.com)
4667.
My Mistakes (gwern.net)
4668.
A Tablet to Rival the Leader -- Pogue on Nexus 7 (nytimes.com)
4669.
The Higgs Boson and Its Discovery Explained with Animation (openculture.com)
4670.
Elephants and Eyeballs: Real-Time Big Data in the Real World (blog.gigaspaces.com)
4671.
How To Design Cool Team Pages (blog.usabilla.com)
4672.
Api Design: Fail Fast (fernandezpablo85.github.com)
4673.
Sergey Brin: Batman, Iron Man or Dr Doom? (kernelmag.com)
4674.
Young Brains Lack Skills for Sharing (scientificamerican.com)
4675.
Life support for DNSChanger-infected machines to be cut off on Monday (technologyreview.com)
4676.
How Clang handles the type / variable name ambiguity of C/C++ (eli.thegreenplace.net)
4677.
Peer-to-peer message-passing to deal with overloaded cell phone networks? (morearty.com)
4678.
Why I quit Microsoft (karenx.com)
4679.
Open 24x7x365: The IBM open PaaS and private cloud platform (expertintegratedsystemsblog.com)
4680.
Facedancer board lets your Python programs pretend to be USB hardware (hackaday.com)