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Latest Secunia Security Advisories:
Microsoft Internet Explorer 7.x — This advisory is currently marked as unpatched! — A vulnerability has been discovered in Internet Explorer, which can be exploited by malicious people to disclose potentially sensitive information. — The vulnerability is caused due to an error …
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MSDN Blogs:
Internet Explorer 7 for Windows XP Available Now — Today we released Internet Explorer 7 for Windows XP. I encourage everyone to download the final version from http://www.microsoft.com/ie. — We listened carefully to feedback from many sources (including this blog) …
Discussion:
Good Morning Silicon Valley, Mark Evans, Thomas Hawk's Digital …, All about Microsoft, Computerworld Blogs, Neowin.net, Blogging Stocks, Windows Vista Team Blog, Digital World Tokyo, MSDN Blogs, MSTechToday, .:UNEASYsilence:., Geek News Central, Bloggers Blog, engtech, The Blog Herald, Digital Inspiration, JD on EP, Slashdot, Tom Raftery's I.T. views and Ben Metcalfe Blog
Chris Messina / FactoryCity:
The beast has awoken; or, The beginning of Web 2.0 … Well, clearly, after cutting my teeth on Spread Firefox, I couldn't simply let the release of IE7, the first major browser upgrade from Microsoft in five years go by unnoticed. — I mean, it's a browser release — which on the surface shouldn't be that interesting.
Danny Sullivan / Search Engine Watch Blog:
Searching Via Internet Explorer 7 & The Battle To Be The Default Search Engine — Now that Internet Explorer 7 has been released in final format, I wanted to look at how search is being handled within the browser. There's been lots of discussion and worries about this in the past.
Robert Scoble / Scobleizer:
Firefox vs. IE 7 (IE7 having trouble with Google sites?)
Firefox vs. IE 7 (IE7 having trouble with Google sites?)
Discussion:
Smalltalk Tidbits …
Richard Siklos / New York Times:
A Virtual World but Real Money — It has a population of a million. The "people" there make friends, build homes and run businesses. They also play sports, watch movies and do a lot of other familiar things. They even have their own currency, convertible into American dollars.
Discussion:
Tech Beat
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Kathleen Craig / Wired News:
Second Life's Must-Have Stuff — (Editor's note: Some links in this story will "teleport" Second Life residents to locations within the virtual world. They will be noted with "SLurl" after them.) — Second Life residents are spending $7 million a month on digital goods and services.
AppleInsider:
Apple's share of U.S. PC market jumps to 6.1 percent — First on AI: Sales of Apple's Macintosh computers over the past twelve month's have grown faster than any other major PC manufacturer, boosting the company's share of the U.S. PC market to 6.1 percent, according to data released by Gartner on Wednesday.
Discussion:
Good Morning Silicon Valley, Liquidmatrix Security Digest, CrunchGear, I4U News and digg
Davis / Davis Freeberg's Digital Connection:
San Francisco Local Politics Derail Free WiFi Project — San Francisco land of the nuts and fruits. I can only say that because I live here and consider many of them my close friends, but if you were a fly on the wall at last night's EarthLink Google WiFi meeting you would know what I mean.
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New York Times:
Music Companies Grab a Share of the YouTube Sale — YouTube's young founders may have been the biggest beneficiaries of last week's $1.65 billion deal with Google, but they have some unexpected bedfellows — old-line media companies that had been considered YouTube's biggest legal threat.
Wendy / Wendy's Blog:
FORBIDDING VISTAS: WINDOWS LICENSING DISSERVES THE USER — Reading the Windows Vista license is a bit like preparing for breakfast with Lewis Carroll's Red Queen: You should be ready to believe at least six impossible things about what users want from software.
Kyle Orland / Next Generation:
GAMING'S TOP 50 JOURNALISTS — Who are the 50 most influential journalists in the U.S games industry? We decided to find a freelancer crazy enough to compile and write up an actual list. Be warned, some of the pictures within are of a disturbing nature.
overstated.net:
Amazon launches answers site — Today I received an invite to join a new community at Amazon called Askville: … This site will compete with Yahoo! Answers and Microsoft Q&A in the free question-answering space except that it might be able to leverage the Amazon community of experts.
Richard MacManus / Web 2.0 Explorer:
YouTube may be the fastest growing website ever! — Jay Meattle of the web statistics firm compete has done an interesting analysis of the growth rates of MySpace vs YouTube. He concludes that YouTube's rate of growth exceeds that of MySpace - i.e. essentially it is more viral!.
Discussion:
The Utube Blog
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Mark Cuban / Blog Maverick:
What will Apple Do ? — While we all wonder what the content companies will do going forward with Google and Youtube, you have to wonder what Apple is thinking and how they will respond. — They have to be sitting their with eyes wide open as they watch 3 of the major record labels sign …
Mike Melanson / Penguin.SWF:
Beta Is Live — Go get it. — This is the beta. Here are the release notes. — While we are still working out exactly how to distribute the final Player version to be as easy as possible for the typical end user, this beta includes 2 gzip'd tarball packages: one is for the Mozilla plugin …
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Associated Press:
Sony battery recall to hit 9.6 million — TOKYO - The number of laptop batteries Sony is recalling will total 9.6 million worldwide, the company said Thursday, shedding more light on the scope of a problem that has rattled confidence in the company's image.
Thomas Crampton / New York Times:
Moscow Music Site Defends Free Downloads — A Web site based in Moscow that the United States Commerce Department has branded as the world's highest-volume online seller of pirated music plans to release hundreds of thousands of albums free, the site said. — Low prices and ease of use …
PC Magazine:
AllofMP3.com to Move To Ad-Supported Model? — The International Herald Tribune reported Wednesday that the site will be launching a "Music For the Masses" program as early as today, allowing consumers to download a software application that will play the music within a restricted player.