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Michael Gartenberg:
Today's Zune News - First Take — Well, we heard from Apple earlier this week (but don't think that's the last word. Last year Apple followed up the Nano announcement with the 5G iPods just a few weeks later) and now it's Microsoft's turn. I spent some time recently with the Zune …
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Microsoft:
Microsoft's Zune Delivers Connected Music and Entertainment Experience — Built-in wireless technology lets consumers share experiences device to device. — Marking the next big milestone for its Connected Entertainment vision, Microsoft Corp. today unveiled details of the first products to be released under its Zune™ brand.
Discussion:
IP Democracy, Engadget, TechCrunch, Read/WriteWeb, Tom Raftery's I.T. views, paidContent.org, Delicate Genius Blog, robhyndman.com, Blackfriars' Marketing, dailywireless.org, OhGizmo!, Mathew Ingram, TechSpot, IP Telephony, VoIP, Broadband, CrunchGear, Zune Insider Blog, Xbox Live's Major Nelson, MSTechToday, Guardian Unlimited, Gamerscore Blog, Blogging Stocks, jkOnTheRun, GottaBeMobile.com, Alice Hill's Real Tech News, The Tech Report, Dare Obasanjo aka Carnage4Life, PVR Wire, Lost Remote and OpsanBlog
Staci D. Kramer / paidContent.org: Microsoft Zune: Interview, Bryan Lee, Corporate VP/CFO, Entertainment …
Paul Miller / Engadget:
Microsoft launches the Zune!
Microsoft launches the Zune!
Discussion:
B2Day, The Unofficial Apple Weblog, InsideMicrosoft, The Mobile Technology Weblog, Business Filter, The Bb Gun, Gadgetell, Listening Post, Anything But iPod, Todd Bishop's Microsoft Blog, Orbitcast, Download Squad, GigaOM, Ken McGuire On The Web, ContentBlogger, J. LeRoy's Evolving Web and PalmAddicts
Ryan Block / Engadget:
The Engadget Interview: J Allard, Microsoft Corporate Vice President
The Engadget Interview: J Allard, Microsoft Corporate Vice President
Discussion:
Gizmodo, Daring Fireball, InsideMicrosoft, The Digital Music Weblog, Netscape.com and digg
Alex Veiga / Associated Press:
Universal Music chief blasts YouTube, MySpace over copyrights — LOS ANGELES - Universal Music Group CEO Doug Morris said the wildly popular Web sites YouTube and MySpace are violating copyright laws by allowing users to post music videos and other content involving Universal artists.
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Tim Arango / New York Post:
TARGET: YOUTUBE — UNIVERSAL MUSIC WARNS WEB VIDEO SWAPPER — Universal Music chief Doug Morris launched a loud salvo at YouTube, warning the upstart Internet firm that it could come into the legal crosshairs of the world's largest music company. — YouTube, the prolific swapper of videos online …
Charles Duhigg / Los Angeles Times:
Music chief faults social Web sites — YouTube, MySpace seen as hindrances on copyright issues — To some in the music industry, social networking sites such as MySpace.com and YouTube.com are a godsend, helping listeners enjoy their acts and discover new bands. — But not to the head of the world's largest music company.
Yinka Adegoke / Reuters:
Universal Music pressuring YouTube, MySpace — NEW YORK (Reuters) - Universal Music Group, the world's biggest record company, is stepping up pressure against popular online sites YouTube and MySpace, accusing them of infringing the copyrights of its artists' music videos.
Liz Gannes / GigaOM:
Evan Williams: How Odeo Screwed Up — Public hindsight about startups' missteps generally comes after a good amount of "traveling in Europe with my fiancée" or whatever it is that failed CEOs do. However, Evan Williams just gave a refreshing talk about the dangers of combining money …
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Dan Farber / Between the Lines:
TechCrunch's Arrington shares his winners and losers — TechCruncher Mike Arrington opened the second day of The Future of Web Apps Summit with his picks of Web 2.0 winners and losers and gives advice to wouldbe startups. He also announced the next blog in the TechCrunch family, which will cover enterprise products.
Discussion:
Web Strategy, Dead2.0, ShoutBlog, Monkey Bites, John Cook's Venture Blog, Lifehacker, Ryan Stewart and O'Reilly Radar
Business Wire:
Yahoo! Announces Availability of New Yahoo! Mail Beta to Users Worldwide; World's No. 1 Web Email Provider Opens Beta Service to All Users in US and 18 Global Markets — Yahoo! Inc. (NASDAQ:YHOO) today introduced the widespread availability of a robust new version of Yahoo! Mail, the No. 1 Web mail service in the world(1).
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Anne Broache / CNET News.com:
Behind Google's German courtroom battle — Google's free Web e-mail offering may be available for correspondence in 40 languages, but efforts at worldwide expansion using the moniker "Gmail" continue to face complications. — Last October, the search giant grabbed headlines …
Erick Schonfeld / B2Day:
Yahoo Mail 2.0 — Yahoo finally opened up its next-generation …
Yahoo Mail 2.0 — Yahoo finally opened up its next-generation …
Discussion:
Google Operating System
Nick / Rough Type:
Office generations — This is the first in a series of occasional commentaries on the future of corporate IT. — In the wake of the popular embrace of the buzzword Web 2.0, the suffix "2.0" has become an all-purpose signifier of putatively revolutionary newness.
Nathan Weinberg / InsideGoogle:
GOOGLE PERSONALIZED HOMEPAGE GETS TABS, JUST LIKE LIVE.COM — Google pulls a trick out of Microsoft's bag (a logical one, to be fair), and adds tabs to the personalized homepage. Here are the tabs as I see them right now on my IG in Opera: — With no extra tabs: — With tabs:
Chris Kohler / Game|Life:
Region-Free Wii — The Wii will be region-free, or at least it should be. — That's the word from Wired News' Joel Johnson, who found Nintendo's VP of marketing Perrin Kaplan at the recent New York City press event and got her to reveal that, like the Nintendo DS, Nintendo's Wii games will work on any console regardless of region.
Nate Anderson / Ars Technica:
Microsoft sued over Xbox Live — Wrap your head around this bit of legal maneuvering: Paltalk, a company based in New York (but incorporated in Delaware), sues Washington-based Microsoft in an East Texas court. Why would the Eastern District of Texas have jurisdiction over such dispute?
Tom Abate / The Technology Chronicles:
PC Forum's demise marks the end of an era — Call it a sign of the times, but what is arguably the longest running elite high-tech conference became a thing of the past. Technolgy guru Esther Dyson has quietly put out the word that the 2006 PC Forum, held in March in Carlsbad, California, would be the last.
Discussion:
Silicon Valley Watcher