Top Items:
New York Times:
176 Newspapers to Form a Partnership With Yahoo — John Marshall Mantel for The New York Times, left; George Frey for The New York Times — Terry S. Semel, left, chief of Yahoo, which is trying to regain its luster. Dean Singleton, the chief of MediaNews, said the deal would help newspapers earn money online.
Discussion:
Center for Citizen Media, Good Morning Silicon Valley, Screenwerk, Yodel Anecdotal, Teaching Online Journalism, AdJab, BuzzMachine, Rational rants, Global Nerdy, Monkey Bites, Mark Evans, Fine On Media, Mathew Ingram, Digital Micro-Markets, Paul Mooney, Blackfriars' Marketing, Listics, Search Engine Journal, John Furrier, The Blogging Times, Search Engine Watch Blog, The Chad, cheezhead and Romenesko
RELATED ITEMS:
Marshall Kirkpatrick / TechCrunch:
Can Yahoo! and Local Papers Save Each Other? — Yahoo! announced this morning a partnership with a number of large newspaper chains, controlling a total of 176 publications, to share content and functionality. Both Yahoo! and local papers around the US are in a state of crisis …
Staci D. Kramer / PaidContent:
It's Official: Yahoo HotJobs-Seven Newspaper Publishers Join Forces …
It's Official: Yahoo HotJobs-Seven Newspaper Publishers Join Forces …
Discussion:
TechEffect
Elaine Peterson / dlib.org:
Beneath the Metadata — Some Philosophical Problems with Folksonomy — Associate Professor / Information Resources Specialist — Montana State University <elainep@montana.edu> — Background — People have been trying to classify and organize information for thousands of years.
Discussion:
vanderwal.net Off the Top
RELATED ITEMS:
David Weinberger / Joho the Blog:
Beneath the Metadata - a reply — Elaine Peterson, associate professor and information resources specialist at Montana State University, has published an article called "Beneath the Metadata: Some Philosophical Problems with Folksonomy" in D-Lib Magazine (doi:10.1045/november2006-peterson).
Mary Jo Foley / All about Microsoft:
Yes, there is an Office 2007 'kill switch' — Buried in a Knowledge Base article that Microsoft published to the Web on November 14 are details of Microsoft's plans to combat Office 2007 piracy via new Office Genuine Advantage lockdowns. — When asked last month whether Microsoft was planning …
RELATED ITEMS:
Maria Aspan / New York Times:
Lyrics Celebrating Bank Merger Impress Only Copyright Lawyer — A video of two Bank of America employees singing a version of U2's "One" to commemorate their company's acquisition of MBNA recently made the rounds of the blogs, prompting amusement and some ridicule from online viewers.
Discussion:
Public Knowledge, Business Filter, Good Morning Silicon Valley, Reel Pop and Boing Boing
RELATED ITEMS:
Seth Schiesel / New York Times:
A Weekend Full of Quality Time With PlayStation 3 — Howard Stringer, you have a problem. Your company's new video game system just isn't that great. — Ever since Mr. Stringer took the helm last year at Sony, the struggling if still formidable electronics giant, the world has been hearing …
Valleywag:
Netscape: the Calacanis effect — Jason Calacanis said, last week, that he was leaving AOL because Jonathan Miller, AOL's ousted CEO, was one of the only business mentors he'd ever had. Loyal, touching, but maybe also rather opportunistic. Valleywag has obtained the internal traffic stats …
Everton Blair / Connected Internet:
Microsoft Windows Comes Of Age - Happy 21st Birthday! — Believe it or not Windows is 21 years old on Monday. When it was launched in 1985 the PC market was barely out of it's infancy, and whatever you may think of Microsoft it is amazing what they Bill Gates & Co have built in such a relatively short time.
Valleywag:
Marc Benioff browbeat Journal brass — The Salesforce.com CEO was so outraged by a Wall Street Journal investigation into his mansion in Hawaii, that he had the reporter arrested and flew to New York to browbeat senior management at the newspaper, Valleywag's learned.
Discussion:
Silicon Valley Watcher
RELATED ITEMS:
Matt Marshall / VentureBeat:
AGLOCO launches — will pay you to surf the Web — AGLOCO is a controversial new Stanford-based start-up that wants to pay you to surf the Web, in return for access to your online surfing information. It launches tonight. — It was discovered two weeks ago by Gigaom, which blasted it as a pyramid scheme.
RELATED ITEMS:
Jeffrey M. O'Brien / Fortune:
The race to create a 'smart' Google — Everything you buy online says a little bit about you. And if all those bits get put into one big trove of data about you and your tastes? Marketer's heaven. Fortune's Jeffrey O'Brien reports. — The setup — (Fortune Magazine) …
Newlaunches.com:
Creative X-Fi Sound System Z600 — The Creative X-Fi Sound System Z600 allows users to dock, charge and playback music content in their Creative ZEN Vision: M player simultaneously. As the first sound system to be powered by Creative's exceptional X-Fi audio processor …
Kotaku:
Wiimote vs Television — It was only a matter of time... Think that wrist-strap is going to protect you and your television from a frenzied Wii Sports session? Yeah...no. It's as likely to end in broken glass as good times. — You've thus been warned: if beers, mates and the Wii …
RELATED ITEMS:
BBC:
'Worm' attacks Second Life world — Virtual world Second Life had to close its doors for a short time on Sunday after a worm attack called grey goo. — The self-replicating worm planted spinning gold rings around the virtual world, which is inhabited by more than a million users.
Staci D. Kramer / PaidContent:
FIM Sells Non My-Space Intermix Assets, Technology To Former CEO Rosenblatt's Demand Media — You're reading it here first ... Richard Rosentblatt, who engineered the attention-getting sale of Intermix and its chief asset MySpace.com, has acquired assets of Intermix Network LLC from Fox Interactive Media for his Demand Media.
Justin Rosenstein / Official Google Blog:
Simplicity and power — When we launched Google Page Creator on Labs earlier this year, we had one overriding goal: take making a website — traditionally a complex process involving HTML, CSS, FTP, and $$$ — and make it drop-dead easy. Since then, the feedback we're received has been loud and clear …
Joris Evers / CNET News.com:
'Tis the season to send spam — In addition to plenty of turkey, a record amount of spam will be served up this holiday season. — Mass e-mailers traditionally bump up their activity as the year winds down. But this year, the amount of junk messages could be unprecedented, companies that make spam-busting tools say.
Discussion:
Techdirt
Tim O'Reilly / O'Reilly Radar:
The Significance of Threadless.com — One of the recurring themes on the O'Reilly Radar is that of "news from the future," the idea that, as William Gibson put it, "The future is here. It's just not evenly distributed yet." We look for events and people that give us signals about what is to come.