Top Items:
Reuters:
Viacom, Google aim ad-backed videos at Web sites — NEW YORK/SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) - Viacom Inc.'s MTV Networks has agreed to distribute clips from its cable networks over Google Inc.'s advertising network, in a test of what could become a new economic model for Web-based video delivery, the companies said on Sunday.
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Abbey Klaassen / AdAge:
McKinsey Study Predicts Continuing Decline in TV Selling Power — Cites 50% Drop in Viewers, 40% Hike in Prime-Time Ad Spend Over Last Decade — NEW YORK (AdAge.com) — A study is about to give Madison Avenue a fresh pummeling: McKinsey & Co. is telling a host of major marketers that by 2010 …
Ken Fisher / Ars Technica:
Google and MTV team up for ad-supported video — Ad-supported video continues to gain momentum online. Google has teamed up with Viacom to provide video clips to websites that are part of Google's AdSense Network. Viacom is the parent company to MTV, VH1, CBS and a number of other premium networks.
BBC:
Google signs $900m News Corp deal — Google is to provide search and advertising on MySpace.com and other websites owned by News Corporation's Fox International Media. — The deal will see Google pay Fox at least $900m (£472m) provided certain web traffic targets are met.
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Marshall Kirkpatrick / TechCrunch:
Fox: $1 billion Search Deal with Google — Fox Interactive Media has entered into a nearly $1 billion, 3+ year deal with Google to exclusively power search across most Fox online sites, including Myspace. The partnership will begin in the fourth quarter of this year and extend though the second quarter of 2010.
Danny Sullivan / Search Engine Watch Blog:
Google & MySpace In $900 Million Deal On Search & Contextual Ads
Google & MySpace In $900 Million Deal On Search & Contextual Ads
Discussion:
PodTech Network Blog
Dawn Kawamoto / CNET News.com:
AOL apologizes for release of user search data — AOL apologized on Monday for releasing search-log data on subscribers that had been intended for use with AOL's newly launched research site. — The randomly selected data, which focused on 658,000 subscribers and posted 10 days ago …
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Ryan Block / Engadget:
Live from WWDC 2006: Steve Jobs keynote — 8:23AM PST - Alright everybody, we're kicking off over here at the Moscone Center in San Francisco. Be sure to book mark this URL, as even though we're doing a little pre-game coverage now, this is where it's all gonna go down when Steve takes the stage at 10:00AM.
Discussion:
Read/WriteWeb, Michael Gartenberg, Download Squad, Gizmodo, Incremental Blogger, The Unofficial Apple Weblog, Paul Colligan's …, FuzzyBlog, Joystiq, TechBlog, Guardian Unlimited, Gadgetell, Teching It Easy, dailywireless.org, The Tech Report, theory.isthereason, PaulStamatiou.com, Tech Digest, The Digital Music Weblog, Blogging Stocks, Nyquist Capital and Between the Lines
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Yahoo! Search blog:
Announcing Yahoo! Search Builder — Look Ma, My Own Search Engine! — It's always great to help a friend. A friend of mine who is a diver wanted a specialized search engine for his website focused on diving. At around the same time, an engineer at Yahoo! built a prototype that made building specialized search engines a snap.
Discussion:
SearchViews, Search Engine Journal, ShoutBlog, Google Watch, Search Engine Watch Blog, Web 2.0 Central and Micro Persuasion
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PC Pro:
AMD to drop ATi brand — Chip guru AMD has announced that it's going to drop the ATi brand name following its takeover of the Canadian graphics underdog. Gareth Cater from AMD told Custom PC that 'the new company will be called AMD,' meaning that we could shortly be seeing AMD-branded Radeon graphics chips.
RuiCarmo / The Tao of Mac:
A Spotty Take On Leopard's Features — I'll be brief, since due to other folk's vacations I spent far too much time wading through a couple dozen million database records with the Swiss Army Knife of the Internet, had a most unfashionably late dinner, pretty much missed the WWDC online coverage …
Dsifry / Sifry's Alerts:
State of the Blogosphere, August 2006 — Three months have passed since my last State of the Blogosphere report, so time for an update on the numbers. For those of you who just want the most interesting tidbits, I've tried something new this time sround - I've put in boldface the most significant information.
Discussion:
Read/WriteWeb, Don Dodge on The Next …, Between the Lines, Trends in the Living Networks, TechBlog, IP Democracy, Church of the Customer Blog, thebloggingtimes.com, Naked Conversations, duncanriley.com, UMBC eBiquity, Joseph Scott's Blog, Earthling, Guardian Unlimited, Mark Evans, Andy Beal's Marketing Pilgrim, Digital Inspiration, ProBlogger Blog Tips, unmediated, Message, Lost Remote, Joho the Blog, LEWIS 360°, The Blog Herald, powered and digg
Tim / O'Reilly Radar:
Open Source: Architecture or Goodwill? — There are a lot of reasons why people make their code open source. I believe that one of the strongest original motivations has often been overlooked. Our hagiography tells the tale of how it all started with the quest for software freedom.
Scott Rosenberg / Scott Rosenberg's Wordyard:
Business Week followup: Valuing assets — Following up on Business Week's bubble-logic cover story on Digg, Techdirt offers a good roundup, suggesting that the $60 million figure was the last-minute work of "higher-up" editors, and noting that it does not appear in the text of the print edition …
Business 2.0:
Why we don't get the (text) message — Texting is insanely popular overseas, but practically nonexistent in the United States - for now. That just means we'll have to import the best tech from abroad. … Consider this anomaly: Ecuador, with a per capita GDP of $4,300 …
Marshall Kirkpatrick / TechCrunch:
FavoriteThingz launches social commerce widget — Sprout Commerce, the company behind MyPickList, has launched a new product today, called FavoriteThingz. A widget for social networking sites like MySpace, FavoriteThingz lets users identify their favorite bands, movies and other branded products …
Tom Evslin / Fractals of Change:
Reader Comment on Net Neutrality (and My Rebuttal) — Reader Richard Bennett, whose own blog often articulates the telco point of view on Internet Neutrality more coherently than most telcos, posted a challenging comment to my post announcing that I'm speaking at the Berkman Center tomorrow.