Top Items:
Sara Ivry / New York Times:
Squabble Over Name Ruffles a Web Utopia — Web 2.0, a term that has come to represent the latest incarnation of the Internet, a place where Web sites are more dynamic and interactive, has a certain Internet utopianism at its heart. But that image took a hit last week when a dispute broke out over who was allowed to use the term.
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Nick / Rough Type:
The neck of Beck's guitar — Beautiful day today. Summer arrived in our neck of the woods right on schedule this year, unfolding her tent on Memorial Day weekend. After a month of rain, it felt good to be out in the heat under a blue sky, worshipping the old sun god.
John Markoff / New York Times:
Software to Look for Experts Among Your Friends — PALO ALTO, Calif., May 27 — For anyone who has hesitated before making a purchase on a Web site, uncertain which brand is preferable, Tacit Software is preparing to introduce an online service that will make it simple to pick the brains …
Adam Cohen / New York Times:
Why the Democratic Ethic of the World Wide Web May Be About to End — The World Wide Web is the most democratic mass medium there has ever been. Freedom of the press, as the saying goes, belongs only to those who own one. Radio and television are controlled by those rich enough to buy a broadcast license.
Loren Baker / Search Engine Journal:
Google Checkout - Answer to Yahoo Paypal? — Google Checkout - Answer to Yahoo Paypal? — On the same day that Yahoo & eBay announced their PayPal and Yahoo Search Marketing oriented partnership, Google registered the domain GoogleCheckout.com, according to ZDNet's Garett Rogers.
Yuki Noguchi / Washington Post:
Online Memorials Bring Strangers and Friends Together in Community of Grief — Days after his wife's death from inflammatory breast cancer in 2004, Michael Bloomer set up a Web page memorial. An old co-worker from Florida signed Kim Bloomer's online guest book. So did a high school classmate in Michigan.
Discussion:
IP Democracy
Julie Bosman / New York Times:
Big Web Site Gives Lift to a Littler One — A reader who trolls around on The New York Observer Web site for a while may spot something unusual: a green-and-white box of headlines with links to news and opinion articles, all crowded under the title "Huff Post."
Nathan Weinberg / InsideGoogle:
GOOGLE PURCHASES ADDING "HIGH QUALITY" MERCHANTS — Another scoop from a quality tipster: Google sent out a notice to testers recently that they are holding a confidential beta of a system to make purchases from "high-quality merchants" using their Google Accounts.
Who da'Punk / Mini-Microsoft:
All Good Things... All good things come to an end. Or to a long pause, or to a ride off into the sunset, or to at least a substantial hibernation (preferably on a holiday weekend, to make the least amount of noise). — I don't often talk or write to other people about what I do here.
Tony Glover / thebusinessonline.com:
Threat to traditional broadcasters — GOOGLE is planning a new version of its search engine - designed for TV screens - that the company's co-founder and its chief executive believe will rival traditional broadcasting. — Chief executive Eric Schmidt told The Business …
Suw Charman / Strange Attractor:
How many news outlet staff actually read their own RSS feeds? — I don't have a TV. I also don't have a radio. I get my news the same way any self-respecting geek does, via the intarwebthingy. It used to be that I would pop along to news websites and see what was going on …
Discussion:
efuddle.com
Paolo Valdemarin Weblog:
It's not always easy to Share Your Opml — SYO is a very cool application. I enjoy browsing other people reading lists and it's a great way to find new interesting content. — As every good net citizen should do, I share my OPML file, but, at least for me, this is not a very easy task.
Seo Book / Aaron Wall's SEO Book.com:
Quick Indications of Low Quality Search Spam — As more and more of the web becomes spam (as a total % of the web) engines are going to get more selective about what they let in their indexes and people are going to be more selective about what they are willing to link at.
Alan Rose / Joystiq:
Atari halts NWN1 support, in financial ruin — Just a few days after the announcement of the latest Neverwinter Nights premium module, Infinite Dungeons, Neverwinter Nights Vault is reporting that Atari has ceased support of the popular Dungeons & Dragons RPG.
Read/WriteWeb:
Mini apps - Bitty Browser and Wampad — I've come across two nifty apps recently that demonstrate a couple of neat things: 1) mobile web utility, and 2) integration with other web services. Both of those things are becoming increasingly important on the Web.
Discussion:
Download Squad
maxconsole.net:
STICKY: Undiluted Platinum - World's First PSP Modchip - Install Pic & Features List! — Just a few short days ago, we broke the news to the world of a World's First PSP Modchip called Undiluted Platinum. Of course there were skeptics out there, but we are now delighted to share …
Discussion:
Kotaku
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Ogle Earth:
Pin in the map — In the mapping simplicity stakes, there is a new player: Pin in the map, a Google Maps API-based web app announced with a press release by UK developers Eden Development. — Pin in the map is nothing less (or more) than one-click placemarking, to which you can add text …
Richard Siklos / New York Times:
From a Small Stream, a Gusher of Movie Facts — THE closest that Col Needham gets to corporate life is the Dilbert calendar in his neat office — a converted bedroom in a quaint house in the ancient village of Stoke Gifford, a suburb of Bristol, the harbor city that is 90 minutes west of London by train.