Top Items:
Ben Fritz / Variety:
Friend or foe? — Film exex want to tap into Jobs' savvy but worry about his growing clout — Five years ago, when Steve Jobs was in negotiations to sell songs on iTunes, he gave music execs a choice: Either work with me or get left in the dust. — They worked with him.
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Ben Fritz / Variety:
Apple plants seeds for pic downloads — iTunes going to the movies — After conquering the digital music biz and taking the lead with TV shows online, Apple is looking to feature films. — The computer company is in active negotiations with most major studios to add movies to its iTunes Music Store …
Andy Kessler / Weekly Standard:
Give Me Bandwidth . . . No one to root for in the net neutrality debate. — FINDING IT HARD TO UNDERSTAND the "net neutrality" debate? On one side are the hip, cool, billionaire web service companies like Google, eBay, Yahoo, and even Microsoft. Net neutrality is their rallying cry.
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Mike / Techdirt:
Forget Net Neutrality: Just Take The Networks Away From The Telcos
Forget Net Neutrality: Just Take The Networks Away From The Telcos
Discussion:
Geek News Central …
Ken Fisher / Ars Technica:
Senate bill compromise paves the way for "Net Neutrality Lite"
Senate bill compromise paves the way for "Net Neutrality Lite"
Discussion:
IP Democracy
Microsoft:
Launch of Windows Live Messenger Marks Significant Progress for Microsoft's Windows Live Era — Microsoft delivers interactive online game as part of launch; users rewarded with exclusive film clip of Disney's upcoming "Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man's Chest" movie.
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Gizmodo, The Gadget Blog:
USB Air Conditioned Shirt — When it comes to USB powered gadgets, this doesn't just take the cake, it takes the entire bakery and then burns it down for the insurance money. The USB shirt has two fans on the left and right sides of the back, taking in air to cleanse all the sweat off your spare tire.
Discussion:
THE RAW FEED
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Dhiramshah / New Launches:
USB Powered Air conditioned clothes — We have USB powered Beverage coolers, gloves, slippers and what not here is a something really unique, USB powered powered air conditioned clothes. Everyone actually does have a natural air conditioner which is sweating and the air conditioned clothes …
Discussion:
Shiny Shiny
Nolan Strong / allhiphop.com:
50 Cent Negotiating With Apple For Branded Line Of Home Computers — Rap star 50 Cent is entering the world of technology and is currently in negotiations with Apple's CEO Steve Jobs to produce a line of affordable home computers to inner-city residents. — According to a recent article in Forbes …
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Anil Dash / Your results may vary.:
Office 2007 is the Bravest Upgrade Ever — Short and sweet, the Ribbon and new UI in Microsoft Office 2007 is the ballsiest new feature in the history of computer software. I've been using Office 12 for about six months, and not only has it made me more productive, I'm struck by the sheer ambition of the changes in this version.
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Ina Fried / CNET News.com:
Microsoft looks beyond Gates for new ideas — Microsoft is looking to replace Bill Gates with a computer. — Okay, that's not entirely true. Many of Gates' duties are being handed off to Ray Ozzie and Craig Mundie as part of the tech icon's effort to step away from day-to-day technical leadership at Microsoft.
Discussion:
The Tech Confidential Blog
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Steve Gillmor / Steve Gillmor's InfoRouter:
Ray in Charge — With my family visiting the in-laws in Charleston …
Ray in Charge — With my family visiting the in-laws in Charleston …
Discussion:
MSFT - Blogging Stocks
digitimes.com:
Foxconn sternly denies iPod sweatshop claims — Kung Tien Huang, Taipei; Rodney Chan, DigiTimes.com [Monday 19 June 2006] — Foxconn Electronics (the registered trade name of Hon Hai Precision Industry) has sternly denied a report insinuating that the company was making iPods for Apple Computer in sweatshops.
Discussion:
TechSpot
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John Gruber / Daring Fireball:
Why Apple Won't Open Source Its Apps — Tim Bray's "Time to Switch?" is a nice tangent to my "And Oranges" piece from Thursday; he's considering the same Mac OS X-to-Ubuntu route as Mark Pilgrim, and he lists both reasons why he wants to switch, as well as some of the issues that would make it unpleasant.
Jay Rosen / Washington Post:
Web Users Open the Gates — A decade after major news providers such as The Washington Post began publishing on the Internet, they are finally beginning to ask the right questions about what the Web can do for them and their readers — and to realize how disruptive web technology is to traditional journalism.
New York Times:
Verizon Sues Vonage in Patents Dispute — Vonage, the Internet telephone startup, said today that it was being sued by Verizon Communications in a dispute over the underlying technology that allows voice calls to be delivered over the Internet. — The lawsuit adds a new challenge for Vonage …
Fiona Morgan / Wired News:
Battling the Copyright Monster — How does a filmmaker document the world around her when the sights and sounds that make up that world are copyright protected? — Law professors Keith Aoki, James Boyle and Jennifer Jenkins co-wrote and produced the comic book Bound By Law? Tales From the Public Domain.
Discussion:
loadedpun
Paz / Coolest Gadgets:
Seeing with sound headset — When I first started writing on this blog one of the things I wrote about is why people have such a passion for gadgets. I argued that people bought gadgets because they wanted either to show off, collect them as fashion accessories, or because they hadn't lost their childhood love of toys.
Thomas Hawk / Thomas Hawk's Digital Connection:
Why I'm Going to Work for Zooomr — Zooomr, experience the world through photos. — I love photography. More than anything else this is where I find my heart, mind, thoughts and time these days. When I was 15 years old my parents bought me my first 35mm camera. It was a Sigma and it rocked my world.
Sara Ivry / New York Times:
Some Sites Off Limits, Even in a Newsroom — Last month, Bennett Haselton, the founder of Peacefire.org, a Web site that promotes open access on the Internet, got an e-mail message from a Los Angeles Times reporter who was writing an article about online censorship.