- CNN.com - Books - A not-so-comic comic book - October 3, 2000
with chris comics interview ware
- Cock-A-Doodle
with cock cock-a-doodle doodle funny poke viral
- Cockroach buster game "COCKROACH DREAM"
with cockroach dream flash game
- coComment - Join the conversation
with blog cocomment comments track by 18 users
- Code Charts (PDF Version)
with charts code pdf unicode by 7 users
- Code Style: Print media browser conformance and compatibility
with browser codestyle compatibility conformance cross-browser css media print table
- Code: Flickr Developer Blog » Location, keeping it real on the streets, yo!
Or something like that anyway. Over on the artsy Flickr Blog we Introduce a new way to geotag, which has a nice pop-up map, which you can drag around, or just enter in the latitude/longitude by hand, something amazingly you couldn’t just do before. However, ‘ere on the Dev blog there’s something else that interests us about this. A thing we call “Corrections” and it’s tucked down at the bottom when you go edit a photo’s location …
with blog corrections flickr geotag neighbourhood reverse woe
- Code: Flickr Developer Blog » Visualizing 4.5 years of Flickr development
We were impressed with Michael Ogawa’s code_swarm project, so were understandably excited when he made the source available (under the GPL v3). We sprang into action, avoiding the real work we were supposed to be doing and created some visualizations of the main Flickr subversion repository.
with activity code development evolution flickr swarm video
- CodeLifter.com - JavaScript Cross-Browser SlideShow Script with Captions and Cross-Fade
with codelifter javascript script slideshow by 2 users
- CodersLife : Icanhazcheezburger interview
In this podcast James Avery talks with Scott Porad about the technologies they use to build one of the funniest sites on the web. They talk about ASP.NET, PHP, application architecture, the cost of using Microsoft tools and technologies, hiring at a startup, startup strategy, and much more.
with architecture backend icanhazcheezburger interview lolcats php podcast ruby technical technology
- CodeWeavers - CrossOver Mac
with codeweavers crossover emulation mac osx parallels windows wine xp by 7 users
- Coding Horror: A Group Is Its Own Worst Enemy
Dare Obasanjo recently wrote about the failure of Kuro5hin, which was originally designed to address perceived problems with the slashdot model
with behaviour clay codinghorror community etiquette group kuro5hin obasanjo shirky slashdot social
- Coding Horror: Don't Forget To Lock Your Computer
Goating techniques vary from insidious and subtle to invasive, borderline vandalism. I prefer the milder forms:
with bsod clippy computer funny geek goating humour lock poltergeist pranks
- Coding Horror: Multiple Monitors and Productivity
with dual monitors multiple productivity study by 2 users
- Coding Horror: Of Spaces, Underscores and Dashes
with codinghorror dashes spaces underscores urls
- Coding Horror: Physics Based Games
I've always been fascinated by physics-based gameplay. Even going back to the primeval days of classic arcade gaming, I found vector-based games, with their vastly simplified 2D approximations of physics and motion, more compelling than their raster brethren. I'm thinking of games like Asteroids, Battlezone, and Lunar Lander.
with bridge builder codinghorror games goldberg list physics rube
- Coding Horror: Regular Expressions for Regular Programmers
That's why I was so excited to discover that two of the gnarliest regex gurus I knew -- Jan Goyvaerts (author of RegexBuddy and regular-expressions.info) and Steven Levithan (author of XRegExp and RegexPal) -- were putting their heads together to create a regular expression reference for the rest of us.
with book codinghorror expressions reference regex regular
- Coding Horror: The Day The Trackbacks Died
with codinghorror comment died social spam trackbacks
- Coding Horror: The Many Faces of (Windows) Death
with bsod death windows
- Coding Horror: Unix is Dead, Long Live Unix
Unix turns 40: The past, present and future of a revolutionary OS is fascinating reading. Forty years ago this summer, a programmer sat down and knocked out in one month what would become one of the most important pieces of software ever created.
with anniversary codinghorror computerworld diagram family history timeline tree unix
Bookmarks 2181 - 2200
« Previous
Next »