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Month: May 2011
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links for 2011-05-13
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"I have a history of building news aggregators. Now, I’ve built one as an addon for Firefox 4."
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links for 2011-05-12
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To me, security is important. But it's no less important than everything *else* that is also important!
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links for 2011-05-11
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links for 2011-05-10
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With App Engine, you can build web applications using the Go Programming Language. Your Go application runs on Google's scalable infrastructure and uses large-scale persistent storage and services.
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The key thing to remember, always, is what the federal government does: it is basically an insurance company for old people that also has an army.
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Here is a list of courses and innovative resources to help CS students, faculty, and instructors. These are examples of the training Google engineers use to learn new skills.
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links for 2011-05-10
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With App Engine, you can build web applications using the Go Programming Language. Your Go application runs on Google's scalable infrastructure and uses large-scale persistent storage and services.
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The key thing to remember, always, is what the federal government does: it is basically an insurance company for old people that also has an army.
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Here is a list of courses and innovative resources to help CS students, faculty, and instructors. These are examples of the training Google engineers use to learn new skills.
Categories
links for 2011-05-09
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Do you have a blog made out of static pages? Do you want to add search to it? Look no further and let Tapir handle it! Enter your feed url and you'll get a token you can use with our API to easily get search on your blog.
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Flooded road on morning commute
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links for 2011-05-08
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links for 2011-05-07
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Leafsnap is the first in a series of electronic field guides being developed by researchers from Columbia University, the University of Maryland, and the Smithsonian Institution. This free mobile app uses visual recognition software to help identify tree species from photographs of their leaves.
Leafsnap contains beautiful high-resolution images of leaves, flowers, fruit, petiole, seeds, and bark. Leafsnap currently includes the trees of New York City and Washington, D.C., and will soon grow to include the trees of the entire continental United States.
This website shows the tree species included in Leafsnap, the collections of its users, and the team of research volunteers working to produce it.