Recently by M. David Peterson

via a recent post to the V8-Dev mailing list, the always impressive Seo Sanghyeon provided the following info and patch related to building the V8 virtual machine on Linux via GCC 4.3: Hello, everybody, I had to do the following...
It seems Google has decided the world needs Yet Another WebKit-based Browser: Chrome. Chrome? That's the best they could come up with?! Well, more on that later. In the mean time it seems we got a little investigative work to get done. Here's what we've got so far...
After returning home from a two-week vacation, Dr. Michael Kay reveals what's next on tap for the XSLT Working Group at the W3C: Streaming XML Transformations. Will the combination of a Schema-Aware XSLT processor, streaming XML, and XMPP completely change the way we both think about and implement message processing solutions in the future? It's certainly possible.
I am a registered Republican who voted for George Bush in 2000 and 2004. And then I realized I made a mistake. Had John Kerry spoke with this level of conviction when he was the Democratic Party presidential candidate,...
As was previously announced to be within a few shorts weeks of becoming publicly available, Amazon Web Services has launched the official public beta of its AWS EC2 Persistent Storage Amazon Elastic Block Store (EBS) solution. Something tells me there's going to be a lot of smiling faces launching new EC2 instances today. ;-)
In a "Why?"-type moment, Red Gate Software has officially taken over the development of Lutz Roeder's .NET Reflector. My now obvious question: Why?
Basing his design on Steven Mesker's seminal work "Building Parsers with Java", Todd Ditchendorf has released the TODParseKit, a Mac OS X Parsing Framework written in Objective-C 2.0.
After an honest and open discussion on the Open Web Foundation mailing list spurred by a post from OWF co-founder Chris Messina, while its still required to answer a question before your first post to the group, what's even more obvious is the fact that no one is denied membership. For extended details, read on...
Is Twitter's 140 character limit having a negative impact on our society. Or are we simply becoming more efficient in our communication with one another?
This last April Amazon Web Services let out some slack on the leashes of a top secret project they'd been working on only to pull back that slack at the last second, ripping from the clutches of 1000's upon 1000's of adoring fans the possibility of gaining even the slightest peek at what was under the covers anytime in the near-term future. That top secret project was a persistent storage solution, the lack of which many folks have long since criticized as the Achilles heel of Amazon Web Services EC2 cloud computing platform since it public beta launch in August of 2006. Today, it seems, that a bit more slack has been released, but as far as I can tell, this time there's no pulling back. Are you ready?
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