Weekly Link Roundup
- Stanford offers free downloads of its iPhone development class | Software | iPhone Central | Macworld
- A great way to learn iPhone programming
- Recent gopher Bookmarks on Delicious
- Wow, it’s been at least ten years since I browsed gopher.
- 8 Year-Old Entrepreneur Makes Plea For Job – Business Opportunities Weblog
- What a cool little kid!
- Tarjeta de dentista :: Cuarto derecha
- Very creative design idea.
Garlic Shrimp and Scallops Recipe (by Jeremy Zawodny)</dd>
- HugeURL
- Totally useless site but good for quick laugh.
- Talking Points Memo | Frightful Kindle
- I love the Kindle app for iPhone but I like the Kindle better. The “non-backlitness” is a big plus for me. I spend a lot of time in front of a screen so the more I can get away the better. The iPhone app is very cool for “having my books with me” all the time. I carry the Kindle a lot of places but I carry the iPhone everywhere.
- Twitter / mcuban: can’t say no one makes mon …
- Haha, good point
- “60 Minutes” freaks out over Conficker. Where’s John Hodgman when you need him? | TV Barn
- “Maybe tonight, a lot of 50-plussers will update their security software or lock up that wi-fi they’ve been sharing with the neighborhood. I suppose that’s all for the good. Still, I wonder if anyone bothered to inform Lauren, the 30-trying-to-look-like-22-year-old featured in those Windows ads, that her $700 Windows box could get infected with Conficker — but a Mac, or a PC with non-MS-manufactured Linux as the operating system, can’t?”
- BBC NEWS | Magazine | Death and my daughters
- A moving story about dealing with death.
- BBC NEWS | UK | England | North Yorkshire | Missing chef website investigated
- I was in the hospital with third degree burns on 22% of my body when I was a junior in high school. A local convenience store placed a can for donations in the store. I know they collected donations – people told me and it was a high traffic store. I never saw a dime of those donations!
- Perfect Running Pace Revealed | LiveScience
- “Researchers at the University of Wisconsin-Madison now have an explanation for this state of running nirvana, and we can thank our ancestors and some evolutionary biology for it.” </dl>