Top Items:
Michael Arrington / TechCrunch:
Text of Email to all Yahoos — This email was sent by Yahoo CFO Susan Decker to all Yahoo employees today at 9:01 AM PST and has the details of who's doing what in their new Advertiser & Publisher Group. Lots and lots of SVP and EVP promotions from the Yahoo ranks, and other peanut butter being spread around.
Michael Olivier / Yodel Anecdotal:
It takes two to Tango — When you find something broken on the Web, product folks at small web sites are usually easy to connect with. But visitors to sites with significant traffic usually have a tougher time lobbing input directly to site development teams about the good, the bad, and the screwed up.
Michael Liedtke / Associated Press:
Google E-Mail Service Ready for All — SAN FRANCISCO — Google Inc.'s free e-mail service will shed the final remnants of its invitation-only restrictions Wednesday, extending the reach of an increasingly popular product that has emerged as a vital cog in the online search leader's expansion efforts.
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Elinor Mills / CNET News.com:
Gmail finally really open to everyone
Gmail finally really open to everyone
Discussion:
Paul Thurrott's Internet Nexus
Dan Primack / PE HUB:
Take Visto Out of Deadpool — Mobile email company Visto Corp. is not on the edge of financial collapse, despite such insinuations this morning from ValleyWag. In fact, multiple sources tell me that the Redwood City, Calif.-based company raised an undisclosed $35 million venture round …
Discussion:
Valleywag
RELATED:
Matt Marshall / VentureBeat:
Visto, Silicon Valley's most controversial company
Visto, Silicon Valley's most controversial company
Discussion:
Valleywag
Karen / Official Google Blog:
Strawberries are red, stems are green... You may have noticed today's Google Doodle on our homepage in celebration of romance and good food (something we consider extremely important). — When you look at the logo, you may worry that we forgot our name overnight, skipped a letter, or have decided that "Googe" has a better ring to it.
Dan Farber / Between the Lines:
From semantic Web (3.0) to the WebOS (4.0) — Nova Spivack of Radar Networks maps out his view of the evolution of the Web over the next 25 years. Nova said he isn't sure about exact dates or technologies on the top end of the map, but his view of ten-year blocks to fully evolve each phase is realistic.
Discussion:
Vecosys
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Ryan Block / Engadget:
Meizu CEO: we only kind of knocked off the iPhone — Funny, we rarely, if ever see a company producing Chinese knocks of high profile devices start defending themselves, but it sounds like Meizu wants to (partly) shed the bad light cast on its M8, er, miniOne non-iPhone.
Thomas C Greene / The Register:
Vista first look: Bugs and confusion — Review The most prominent feature of Windows Vista is its cost. So, before we get into the nuts and bolts of how it behaves, let's talk about value for money. Because at these prices, it had better be good. — The stand-alone version …
Michael Kanellos / CNET News.com:
MIT student invents device for wall crawling — Nathan Ball, a mechanical-engineering graduate student at Massachusetts Institute of Technology, led a team that has invented a motorized pulley that will let paramedics and firefighters zip up the side of buildings sort of like Spider-Man.
Elinor Mills / CNET News.com:
Viruses promise heartbreak on Valentine's Day — update Beware of e-mails bearing Valentine's Day greetings, or you may get a digital heartache. — At least two romance-themed security threats are arriving in e-mail in-boxes on Wednesday, researchers have warned.
Read/WriteWeb:
How Social Sites Reveal What Your Audience Likes — Written by Alex Iskold and edited by Richard MacManus — Understanding your audience is the key to success in any business - including blogging. Lately the Read/WriteWeb authors have been discussing what it is that keeps readers coming back here.
Discussion:
ProBlogger Blog Tips
Microsoft:
Microsoft Security Advisory (933052) — Vulnerability in Microsoft Word Could Allow Remote Code Execution — Microsoft is investigating new public reports of very limited, targeted attacks against Microsoft Word "zero-day" using a vulnerability in Microsoft Office 2000 and Microsoft Office XP.
Edo / Pink Tentacle:
Hitachi develops RFID powder — Hitachi's new RFID chips (pictured on right, next to a human hair) are 64 times smaller than their mu-chips (left) — RFID keeps getting smaller. On February 13, Hitachi unveiled a tiny, new "powder" type RFID chip measuring 0.05 x 0.05 mm — the smallest yet …
Onethumb / SmugBlog:
This is your Mac on drugs — Why the web can look wonky on a Mac by Chris MacAskill, President of SmugMug — The PC is a soldier. When Direktor Gates demands color #e3823c, PC responds "Sir, Yes Sir!!" Color #e3823c looks identical on the PC whether it's in a JPEG, GIF, PNG, CSS, or HTML.
Sam Sethi / Vecosys:
Saul Klein leaves Skype to turn "gamekeeper" at Index — Index Ventures today announced that serial entrepreneur Saul Klein has gone from "poacher to gamekeeper" by joining the firm as their new venture partner. This is great news and congratulations to Saul from Mike and I.
Discussion:
alarm:clock euro
Loren Baker / Search Engine Journal:
13 Reasons Why NoFollow Tags Suck — The NoFollow link attribute (rel="nofollow") was originally created to block search engines from following links in blog comments, due to the amount of blog comment spamming. — The theory is that if spammers are spamming in blog comments to get better SEO …
James R. Hagerty / Wall Street Journal:
How Good Are Zillow's Estimates? — Popular Home-Price Web Site — Often Gets It Right but Can Be — Way Off the Mark, We Find — In the year since its launch, Zillow Inc. has made millions of Americans familiar with computer-generated estimates of home values …
PR Newswire:
Krugle to Power Code Search Engine for Yahoo! Developer Network — MENLO PARK, Calif., Feb. 14 /PRNewswire/ — Krugle, Inc., the code search engine for developers, today announced it will supply search functionality for the Yahoo! Developer Network, the centralized resource for the developer community …
Discussion:
Monkey Bites, Tech~Surf~Blog, InfoWorld Tech Watch, Mashable!, Search Engine Watch Blog, 901am and Search Engine Journal
JR Minkel / Scientific American:
First "Commercial" Quantum Computer Solves Sudoku Puzzles — Quantum computing company banks on a longshot form of quantum computing — A Canadian manufacturer today unveiled what it called "the world's first commercially viable quantum computer." D-Wave Systems, Inc. …