Top Items:
Matt Marshall / VentureBeat:
Rumor: Google about to sign ad deal with Dish Networks — Google is about to sign a deal with Dish Network, the nation's second largest satellite TV company, to deliver ads for Dish's network, VentureBeat is hearing. — We haven't been able to confirm the rumor (Google has not yet responded to a request for comment).
Discussion:
GigaOM, Search Engine Journal, Google Watch, The Media Age, Lost Remote and Search Engine Land
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USA Today:
Eisner to take on the Internet — NEW YORK — Former Disney CEO Michael Eisner built his career trying to identify and shape hit movies and TV shows. Now he's at it again, this time on the Internet. — His investment firm, The Tornante Co., will announce Monday the formation of a studio …
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Staci D. Kramer / PaidContent:
New Eisner Internet Video Venture: Web Studio Vuguru
New Eisner Internet Video Venture: Web Studio Vuguru
Discussion:
Lost Remote
gizmag Emerging Technology Magazine:
The first universal mobile phone charger — March 12, 2007 The world's first universal mobile phone charger is being introduced at CEBIT this week. Designed by Professor Luigi Colani, a nearly 80-year-old legend in the field of industrial design, the Anyfix can recharge more than 80% …
Carolyn Y. Johnson / Boston Globe:
Not so fast, broadband providers tell big users — Firms impose limits even as demand rises — Amanda Lee of Cambridge received a call from Comcast Corp. in December ordering her to curtail her Web use or lose her high-speed Internet connection for a year.
Discussion:
The Progress & Freedom …
Eric Sylvers / New York Times:
As Mobile Phones Grow More Complex, Carriers Insist on Fewer Operating Systems — Two operating systems run more than 95 percent of the world's computers, but dozens of systems are behind the 2.5 billion mobile phones in circulation, a situation that has hampered the growth of new services …
BBC:
Beatles download rumour quashed — The Beatles' record label has moved to dampen rumours that the band's music is about to become available online. — The Fab Four are the last major act to withhold their back catalogue from stores like iTunes and Napster.
Discussion:
CrunchGear
Danny Sullivan / Search Engine Land:
Google Warning Against Letting Your Search Results Get Indexed — The days of doing a Google search that brings up results leading to search results from other sites are heading for a close. Matt Cutts, in his Search Results In Search Results post today, points out a change to Google's guidelines …
Heather Chaplin / New York Times:
Is That Just Some Game? No, It's a Cultural Artifact — When Henry Lowood, curator of the History of Science and Technology Collections at Stanford University, started preserving video games and video-game artifacts in 1998 he thought it was closer to professional oblivion than a bold new move into the future.
Google Blogoscoped:
Netvibes' Universal Widget API — Netvibes released the "Universal Widget API" (UWA) with the claim "Write once, run everywhere" (ouch, I'm reminded of an old unfulfilled Sun/ Java promise!). The idea is that you create gadget code only once, and then have it run on the Google Personalized Homepage …
Robert Levine / New York Times:
Who Owns the Live Music of Days Gone By? — When it began in 1973, the "King Biscuit Flower Hour" was very much of its time. Bob Meyrowitz, who ran the show during its heyday, had the idea to start a weekly rock concert radio program as an alternative to chaotic festival shows after a fan …
Derik DeLong / MacUser:
VirtueDesktops dev calling it quits — Until Leopard and Spaces makes it appearance (sometime this Spring), fans of virtual desktops had a couple third party options. My personal favorite for both functionality and price reasons, was VirtueDesktops (site might still be down right now).
Jonathan Thaw / Bloomberg:
Wikia plans editable Web search engine — Wikia Inc., the San Mateo company co-founded by Wikipedia creator Jimmy Wales, plans to challenge Google Inc. and Yahoo Inc. with a search engine that lets users edit and fine-tune its results. — The goal for the project is to get 5 percent of the search market …
Bob Tedeschi / New York Times:
Log in Your Measurements, and the Clothes May Fit — CUSTOMERS bought $9.6 billion worth of apparel online in the United States last year, according to Forrester Research, the Internet consulting firm. But not one of those customers tried anything on first.
Ryan Block:
CompUSA closing the store where I had my first job — It's been in the undercurrent of tech news the last few weeks that over a hundred CompUSA stores are closing nationwide. I think I've mentioned it on the air before, but CompUSA was my first "real" job; I checked Rex's site today …
Jonathan Schwartz / Jonathan Schwartz's Weblog:
Moving A Petabyte of Data — I made a speech last week at which I asserted it was faster to send a petabyte of data from San Francisco to Hong Kong by sailboat, than by the internet. — I got quite a few "how can that possibly be true" kinds of questions, so here's the math.
Eric Rice:
Lack of updates? It's cuz Twitter sorta pwned! bloggers — I have barely even seen Scoble blog, but I've seen 42384728 Twitter messages from him. Most communication about the conference is going on with Twitter (which seems STUPID for things NOT conference/social/spatial/RL- ish).
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