Top Items:
Om Malik / GigaOM:
Ask Goes Local with AskCity — Will Google be the winner in the $31 billion local search and online classified advertising market, asks Donna Bogatin over at the ZD Net's Digital Micro Markets blog. Perhaps, but it is not going to have it easy, if Jim Lanzone, CEO of Ask.com has anything to do with it.
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Michael Arrington / TechCrunch:
AskCity Launches. It's Cool. — We've previously named Yahoo Maps the top maps application on the Internet. — Tonight we're not so sure. The new AskCity product, which combines Ask.com's existing maps product (overhauled last February) with deep local content (information, reviews …
Discussion:
Screenwerk
Natali Del Conte / TechCrunch:
Azureus Launches Zudeo For Finding And Sharing Video — Azureus will launch Zudeo.com Monday morning, a content indexing site for finding and sharing large video files. The company told TechCrunch on Friday that they would be partnering with 20 major TV and film studios to provide free programs …
Saul Hansell / New York Times:
Have Camera Phone? Yahoo and Reuters Want You to Work for Their News Service — Hoping to turn the millions of people with digital cameras and camera phones into photojournalists, Yahoo and Reuters are introducing a new effort to showcase photographs and video of news events submitted by the public.
Michael Arrington / TechCrunch:
Apple iPhone Details From Kevin Rose — I just caught this on CrunchGear: Digg's Kevin Rose told me a few weeks ago that he had some good inside information on the upcoming iPhone, but he wouldn't tell me anything. Well, after a couple of beers he spills the beans on Diggnation, and the clip is embedded below.
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CrunchGear
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Ryan Block / Engadget:
Kevin Rose confirms iPhone? — So apparently last night Kevin Rose, of Digg and Diggnation fame, apparently confirmed information he knew about the iPhone on his eponymous vidcast. According to Kevin, who, to his credit, accurately predicted one of Apple's most secretive and hyped launches of 2005 …
Andrew McAfee:
Required Reading — Today's New York Times Magazine's cover story is "Open Source Spying." The teaser after the title asks "The nation's intelligence agencies are giving their cold-war-era computer systems a complete makeover. But will blogs and wikis really help spies uncover terrorist plots?"
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CNET News.com:
IRS taxation of online game virtual assets inevitable — NEW YORK—If you are a hard-core player of virtual worlds like World of Warcraft, Second Life, EverQuest or There, IRS form 1099 may someday soon take on a new meaning for you. — That's because game publishers may well in the not too distant future …
Rexdixon / Technically Speaking:
Interview with Ross Levinsohn — Near the middle of last month, Ross Levinsohn departed from a successful run over at Fox Interactive Media. The online world was buzzing with speculation, as well as flat out false statements. Just the other day, I posted a link to such a video …
Discussion:
ben barren
Matt Craven / The Blog Herald:
We've sold The Blog Herald — It was just ten months ago that we acquired The Blog Herald from Duncan Riley, the original founder. And now we've closed a deal to sell The Blog Herald to an undisclosed buyer. — It's with a whole bag of mixed feelings that I find myself writing this post.
David Berlind / Berlind's Testbed:
TinyURL.com: The next YouTube? Perhaps not $1.6B's worth, but... By now, you're laughing your ass off. With the $1.6B of Google's money that YouTube commanded, if you've ever even visted the simplistic and somewhat basic looking TinyURL.com (most haven't), you're probably thinking …
Discussion:
Things That
Fred / A VC:
Posting And Tracking Flash Video — My four rules for the future of media are: — 1 - Microchunk it - Reduce the content to its simplest form. — 2 - Free it - Put it out there without walls around it or strings on it. — 3 - Syndicate it - Let anyone take it and run with it.
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Howard Lindzon
Marc Hedlund / O'Reilly Radar:
Engineering Management Hacks: Exupéry's Axiom … Antoine de Saint-Exupéry (attributed) — There are a lot of ways to build bad engineering teams, and very few ways to build great ones. I've come to believe that the attributed quote above spells out pretty …
Michael Arrington / TechCrunch:
Web 2.0: The Poster — Go2Web2 writes about Berlin-based eboy, which sells a number of cool pixel object posters as a side business to working with clients like Wired, Amazon, Microsoft and many others. A few days ago they put this web 2.0 poster (click image to see it in full size) on sale.