July 2012 Archive
10981.
HackNow: Programming contest for young people in Europe (hacknow.org)
10982.
Three insane products. (jmduke.net)
10983.
Rethink Digg Survey Results (rethinkdigg.com)
10984.
Flexible and Economical UTF-8 Decoder (bjoern.hoehrmann.de)
10985.
Codecademy now provides Python courses (codecademy.com)
10986.
Ask HN: Should I revive an old website project? ()
10987.
Why Are We Still Using CRMs (blog.strideapp.com)
10988.
Louis CK Explains How to Make Great Content (youtube.com)
10989.
Google+ is What Internet Forums Should Have Been (thenextweb.com)
10990.
Get 35% Off Martin Fowler's Latest Book, "NoSQL Distilled" | Architects Zone (architects.dzone.com)
10991.
Netflix Open Sources Chaos Monkey (gigaom.com)
10992.
Ask HN: Why hackernews down? ()
10993.
Node.js module for Google Closure Compiler, Templates, and LESS (github.com)
10994.
Android’s US Market Share Declined By 5% In Q2: Strategy Analytics (techcrunch.com)
10995.
Why The Open Cloud Wins And Oracle Loses When IT Gets Virtualized (techcrunch.com)
10996.
Smarter than the average... (anchor.com.au)
10997.
Architecture the Lost Years by Robert Martin [video] (hash-table.com)
10998.
Imaging at a Trillion Frames Per Second (Can show movement of light beam) (ted.com)
10999.
Big Idea vs. Lean Idea (bostonvcblog.typepad.com)
11000.
Today's Ultra/Magic and Technological Event Horizons (onebigfluke.com)
11001.
The Ad Contrarian: Advertising And The Future Of Apple (adcontrarian.blogspot.com)
11002.
Twitter Launches Clickable Stock Symbols (techcrunch.com)
11003.
Ready, Steady, Go (drdobbs.com)
11004.
Imaging at a trillion frames per second (ted.com)
11005.
Who is a rapist? (guardian.co.uk)
11006.
Spa Now app featured on Howard Stern. A massage parlor finder for your iPhone (itunes.apple.com)
11007.
Rust 0.3 released (rust-lang.org)
11008.
What Higher Education Will Look Like in 2020 [STUDY] (mashable.com)
11009.
President Obama Related to First Documented Slave in America (corporate.ancestry.com)
11010.
Mainstream media latches on to Facebook 'bot' clicks (latimes.com)