Top Items:
Mitch Ratcliffe / Rational rants:
Google's run is more than half done — Skrentablog welcomes our new insect overlords from Google, arguing that the company has won the battle for market dominance in the "third age of computing." Google has, according to this thinking, and it is compelling, become the environment …
RELATED:
Skrentablog:
Winner-Take-All: Google and the Third Age of Computing … Google has won both the online search and advertising markets. They hold a considerable technological lead, both with algorithms as well as their astonishing web-scale computing platform. Beyond this, however …
Alex Bailey / cyber-knowledge.net:
GMail Vulnerable To Contact List Hijacking — Affordable Hosting — Using a form of cross scripting, it becomes easy to steal a GMail user's contact list if they visit a certain type of website. The only condition is you have to be logged in to GMail at the time of the attack.
Discussion:
Googlified, Joe Walker's Blog, Google Operating System, O'Reilly ONLamp Blog, Engadget, digg and Slashdot
RELATED:
Nathan Weinberg / InsideMicrosoft:
Ironic: Free Vista PC Arrives Broken; Plus, The Last Word — Long Zheng, who seems very disheartened over this Windows Vista free PC blogger fiasco, posts about the new Velocity Micro Media Center that he was sent by the PR folks. The ironic thing: His arrived broken …
Richard MacManus / Read/WriteWeb:
China-based Browser Maxthon Going Global in 2007 — Written by Gang Lu and edited by Richard MacManus. Original version posted on Gang Lu's blog The MObilenoDE. — Maxthon (formerly known as MyIE) is a browser that reportedly has 30% of the browser market in its home country of China, second only to IE and ahead of Firefox.
RELATED:
Brad Stone / New York Times:
Using Web Cams but Few Inhibitions, the Young Turn to Risky Social Sites — Popular Web sites like YouTube and MySpace have hired the equivalent of school hallway monitors to police what visitors to their sites can see and do by cracking down on piracy and depictions of nudity and violence.
Discussion:
blackrimglasses.com
Om Malik / GigaOM:
The Truth About Nokia VoIP — Ah, it was supposed to be the day to recover from the throbbing pain in my head, lying around and generally doing nothing. For some odd reason, I powered up my Macbook Pro, and discovered this Nokia Gizmo Project meme. — The not-exactly accurate nature of all the talk …
Discussion:
m-trends.org
RELATED:
Laura M. Holson / New York Times:
Disney Plans to Introduce a Sleek Makeover of Disney.com Site — LOS ANGELES, Dec. 31 — When the Walt Disney Company's chief executive, Robert A. Iger, takes the stage at the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas on Jan. 8, he is expected to introduce the new Disney.com Web site that has taken more than a year to redesign.
Richard MacManus / Read/WriteWeb:
Mozilla Does Microformats: Firefox 3 as Information Broker — Just before Christmas, Mozilla designer Alex Faaborg published some introductory posts on his blog about where Mozilla is headed with microformats. Quick background: Mozilla is of course the developer of the popular open source browser Firefox …
Christopher Elliott / New York Times:
Wi-Fi Is Hitting the Road in Cars From Avis, but Technical and Legal Bumps Lie Ahead — Try connecting to a high-speed wireless network from a car, and you are pretty much limited to one method: rigging your laptop computer with a special modem and subscribing to a costly, and sometimes temperamental, wireless service.
Discussion:
Wi-Fi Networking News
Dave Winer / Scripting News:
The unedited voice of a person — People use blogs primarily to discuss one question — what is a blog? The discussion will continue as long as there are blogs. — It's no different from other media, all they ever talk about is what they are. We got dinged by the NY Times …
Michael Arrington / TechCrunch:
2007: Web 2.0 Companies I Couldn't Live Without — A year ago I wrote a post called "Web 2.0 Companies I Couldn't Live Without" and listed thirteen startups who's products made a real impact in my life. Those were the products that I loved, and used every day.
Ismael Ghalimi / IT|Redux:
Inferences for '07 — Last year's inferences lead to an unexpectedly high 83% success rate. This will be hard to beat, especially because my new batch of nine inferences will be stated in more measurable ways, leaving little room for history rewriting. Let's give it a shot anyway …
Discussion:
Open Sources
Amy Gahran / E-Media Tidbits:
Need Local Blogs? Check Out Placeblogger — What's happening in Pearlington, Miss. or Bozenman, Mont.? Sure, you could check local news outlets — but to get a deeper slice of life you might peruse nearby placeblogs. — Finding placeblogs just got a whole lot easier.
Arn / MacRumors:
Macworld San Francisco 2007 Rumor Roundup — With Macworld San Francisco (MWSF) quickly approaching, MacRumors provides this Rumor Roundup as a summary of major rumors circulating around the Mac Web before the big event. (Previous MacRumors MWSF roundups: 2006, 2005, 2004, 2003, and 2002.)
Michael Arrington / TechCrunch:
Wikipedia Bans Qatar — Qatar, home to nearly a million people, has been blocked from editing any entry on Wikipedia "due to a large volume of spam and vandalism." — Apparently Qatar has a single ISP, Qtel, with a single IP address shared by the entire country.
Discussion:
The Yourdon Report