Reading digest for 01/12/09 to 01/19/09
Interesting finds from around the web this week:
- Inauguration Crowd Will Test Cellphone Networks (via NYT > Business (via FullContentFeed.com))
- Op-Ed Columnist: The Long, Lame Goodbye (via NYT > Opinion (via FullContentFeed.com))
- The lost cult of Microsoft program managers (via scottberkun.com)
- Web Service Shows US Airways Aborted Route Over New York City (via TechCrunch)
- Library use jumps in Seattle area; economy likely reason (via The Seattle Times: Local News (via FullContentFeed.com))
- When Steve Jobs Said “Stay Hungry. Stay Foolish,” He Did Not Mean This Foolish (via BoomTown)
- Who Would Jesus Smack Down? – Mark Driscoll, a Pastor with a Macho Conception of Christ – NYTimes.com (via www.nytimes.com)
- Did Speculation Fuel Oil Price Swings?, 60 Minutes: Speculation Affected Oil Price Swings More Than Supply And Demand – CBS News (via www.cbsnews.com)
- Cashnxt: Low-Cost Banking for the Rural Poor (via ReadWriteWeb)
- The Power of the Penny (via The Business Sheet)
- What Happens When College Cafeterias Go Trayless? (via Freakonomics (via FullContentFeed.com))
- Another Stonehenge Discovered Under Lake Michigan? [Mad Science] (via io9)
- At M.I.T., Large Lectures Are Going the Way of the Blackboard (via NYT > Science (via FullContentFeed.com))
- Tunnel it is (via Seattle Transit Blog)







