July 2012 Archive
16501.
Splitting jQuery in Two, A Proposal (johnbender.us)
16502.
Could A Yahoo-Google Deal Emerge? (searchengineland.com)
16503.
New Voice Recognition Platform Wants You Talking To Your Household Gadgets (techcrunch.com)
16504.
AOL Autos Partners W/ CarWoo (YC S09) To Let Users Negotiate W/ Dealerships (techcrunch.com)
16505.
Hooking up Whoosh and SQLalchemy (sawhoosh) (pieceofpy.com)
16506.
Apple forced by judge to run newspaper ads stating Samsung does not copy iPad (bgr.com)
16507.
Don't Let ATT Get Away With Bogus SMS Charges (teqknowledgy.com)
16508.
Bryan Caplan explains how he loves education (econlog.econlib.org)
16509.
Office Next: Using the new Office with touch (blogs.office.com)
16510.
Hacker News Welcome Message (ycombinator.com)
16511.
Territorial Programmers (michaelminton.com)
16512.
World's Top Business Thinkers (ph.news.yahoo.com)
16513.
UK Court orders Apple to advertise 'Samsung did not copy' (hexus.net)
16514.
YouTube Launches Feature to Blur Faces in Videos (forbes.com)
16515.
One Javascript Singleton to Rule Them All (nmrk.it)
16516.
Rumor: Seagate eyeballing an OCZ acquisition (icrontic.com)
16517.
Earth-Observing Camera to Launch to International Space Station (spaceindustrynews.com)
16518.
Ask HN: Who should I follow on Google+? ()
16519.
Ideology clouds how we perceive the temperatures (arstechnica.com)
16520.
Crowdsource Design Feedback (feedbackfrom.us)
16521.
What would you do with 1 Gbps? (mozillaignite.org)
16522.
Video Tour: All of iRobot's Coolest Stuff (spectrum.ieee.org)
16523.
Issues with new TLS versions (imperialviolet.org)
16524.
Use AWS Elastic Beanstalk for arbitrary application stacks (github.com)
16525.
A close look at Etsy, Inc. financing rounds (vcexperts.com)
16526.
XSRF/CSRF Vulnerability Explained in Non-Geek Speak (crazyviraj.blogspot.de)
16527.
Get started using Backbone.js [screencast series] (youtube.com)
16528.
My startup ideas (sprng.me)
16529.
Space has a Smell (sciencesoup.tumblr.com)
16530.
Flip-dot display is an advertising experience we can get behind (hackaday.com)