July 2012 Archive
14731.
How Much Money? (cristianmihai.net)
14732.
Shelby.tv Shuts Down, Promises New Version Is In The Works (techcrunch.com)
14733.
Convert Dates Between Ruby and Javascript (dotnetguy.co.uk)
14734.
Move to open sky for Skylon spaceplane (bbc.co.uk)
14735.
How a Couple Lives in a 240-square-foot Apartment (shine.yahoo.com)
14736.
Guest Blogpost from UI_MAN – Why PowerCLI is making things worse… (rtfm-ed.co.uk)
14737.
Resolution Enhancement by Vibrating Displays (floraine.org)
14738.
Cloudability closes an $8.7 million Series A round (blog.cloudability.com)
14739.
People staring at computers (wired.com)
14740.
EmTech Colombia: MIT Tech Review in South America (Spanish) (emtechcolombia.com)
14741.
Rovio and the ‘Amazing Alex’ gamble (bgr.com)
14742.
Strange Maps (bigthink.com)
14743.
How many clicks does it take? Too many on the Apple TV. (virtualpants.com)
14744.
Over 450,000 Yahoo Accounts Hacked Today (technewsbest.com)
14745.
Come own Kicksend's iPhone app ()
14746.
Nearly half a million Yahoo passwords leaked following hack (net-security.org)
14747.
BMW adds Siri-like voice dictation, then builds a touchpad into iDrive (extremetech.com)
14748.
How Pinerly Pivoted a Bloated, Failed Startup into a Lean Industry Leader (techvibes.com)
14749.
From Walden Pond to Twitter (patrickrhone.com)
14750.
Virgin Galactic reveals plans for putting small satellites into orbit. (bbc.co.uk)
14751.
Email is neither wrong nor broken (hopelesscom.de)
14752.
Crap Science: Ocean City, Md. Measures Tourism With Wastewater (dcist.com)
14753.
Holy iPad slayer Company releases world’s first Christian tablet (foxnews.com)
14754.
Things Toxic to Scalability (iheavy.com)
14755.
Galaxy Nexus phone back in stock on play.google.com ()
14756.
An RPN Calculator In 113 Characters of Ruby (gist.github.com)
14757.
Big Science and Big Data: New Vistas of Discovery (dataversity.net)
14758.
The "Industrial Revolution" of Software. (sinzone.me)
14759.
Will Johnny Code Again? (davidbrin.blogspot.com)
14760.
GE's Novel Battery to Bolster the Grid (technologyreview.com)