Top Items:
Tim O'Reilly / O'Reilly Radar:
Draft Blogger's Code of Conduct — When I wrote my Call for a Blogging Code of Conduct last week, I suggested some ideas of what such a code might contain, but didn't actually put forth a draft that people could subscribe to. We're not quite there yet, but we have a plan.
Discussion:
Valleywag, Ars Technica, mathewingram.com/work, The Blog Herald, Invisible Inkling, yelvington.com, Andrew Lark, IP Telephony, VoIP, Broadband, InformationWeek Weblog, kottke.org, Deep Jive Interests, Better Living through Software, Jim Kukral Online …, Connecting the Dots, gapingvoid, the j. botter weblog, Rough Type, Not Quite a Blog 2.0, Center for Citizen Media, J. LeRoy's Evolving Web, Apple 2.0, Zoli's Blog, robhyndman.com, Epicenter, Guardian Unlimited, Fractals of Change, WebProNews, Mark Evans, Roam4free, The Secret Diary of Steve Jobs, Burningbird, Smalltalk Tidbits …, 901am, Digital Common Sense, The Intuitive Life …, Enterprise Web 2.0, The TNL.network and Social Media Club
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Jeff Jarvis / BuzzMachine:
No twinkie badges here. — I was doing my best to ignore Tim O'Reilly's misguided effort to play hall monitor to the blogosphere, wishing it would just go away. But unfortunately the New York Times did not ignore it. How could it pass up a juicy opportunity to make us all look like the louts they all too often think we are?
Discussion:
Scripting News, rexblog.com, Weblogg-ed, John Furrier, Smalltalk Tidbits …, Life On the Wicked Stage, A VC and the Constant Observer
Mike / CrunchNotes:
My Thoughts On O'Reilly's Code of Conduct — Tim O'Reilly has posted a draft code of conduct that bloggers would voluntarily accept and promote. This all stems from the Kathy Sierra/Chris Locke issue from a couple of weeks ago. The New York Times is all over this as well.
Robert Scoble / Scobleizer:
Code of conduct or not? — Tim O'Reilly just posted the draft of a Blogger's Code of Conduct that he's hoping we all adopt. I instantly asked the mob hanging out on Twitter what they thought. Brett Nordquist had this funny thought: — "Something tells me the sites with the 'Anything Goes' logo will be more interesting."
Tom Neumayr / Apple:
100 Million iPods Sold — Apple® today announced that the 100 millionth iPod® has been sold, making the iPod the fastest selling music player in history. The first iPod was sold five and a half years ago, in November 2001, and since then Apple has introduced more than 10 new iPod models …
Discussion:
Engadget, PC World: Techlog, Gizmodo, MacUser, VoIP & Gadgets Blog, Guardian Unlimited, TechSpot News, I4U News, Paul Thurrott's Internet Nexus, CrunchGear, Graceful Flavor, The Unofficial Apple Weblog, Paul Colligan's …, Media 3.0 with Shelly Palmer, MacMinute, Mark Evans, Podcasting News, geektechnique.org and digg
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Carl Howe / Blackfriars' Marketing:
100 million iPods and the accelerating growth of iTunes — Today's New York times ran the Apple ad shown above celebrating 100 million iPods sold. With that milestone achieved, I thought it might be interesting to analyze the last five years of iPod and iTunes growth.
Joshua Freed / Associated Press:
DVD retailers try to avoid repeat performance
DVD retailers try to avoid repeat performance
Discussion:
paidContent.org
Iancr / Yahoo! Music Blog:
Wifi-Enabled SanDisk Sansa Connect Features Yahoo! Music Unlimited, LAUNCHcast, Messenger, and Flickr — It's with great pride I announce the release of the SanDisk Sansa Connect, the new Wifi-enabled portable MP3 player set to free you from the USB cable chaining you to your PC …
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Froosh / HipMojo.com:
Yahoo/Sansa's Music Player Foray: 100M iPods too Late?
Yahoo/Sansa's Music Player Foray: 100M iPods too Late?
Discussion:
alarm:clock
Johnporcaro / Gamerscore Blog:
Pictures of the New Text Input Device — Okay, I'm no product shot expert, but I was able to get a few pictures of the new Text Input Device this morning. There have been some questions about how it attaches, and how comfortable the controller would be with the keyboard attached.
Discussion:
Engadget, Gizmodo, Gear Live, Joystiq, 1P Start, MyGamerCard.net News and Xbox 360 Fanboy
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Business Wire:
AMD Updates First Quarter Outlook — SUNNYVALE, Calif.—(BUSINESS WIRE)—AMD (NYSE:AMD - News) today announced it expects to report revenue of approximately $1.225 billion in the quarter ending March 31, 2007. Revenues declined sharply quarter-over-quarter for the Computing Solutions segment …
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Om Malik / GigaOM:
AMD gives us a Tech reality check — If you are paying too much attention to the blogger code of ethics debate, then you are missing what could turn out to be technology industry's very own blizzard of 2007. The demand for devices - from PCs to wireless phones to everything is heading south - fast.
Paul Kapustka / GigaOM:
AT&T: Free calls may cost $250 M — How much could the so-called Free Calling schemes cost AT&T this year? More than $250 million, if you are to believe a letter AT&T chief lobbyist Jim Cicconi sent to FCC chairman Kevin Martin last week. — As the phone giant's latest move …
Discussion:
Valleywag
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Ronald Grover / Business Week:
Media Moguls Make Their Move Online — Former media titans such as Eisner and Bochco are finding lots to like as they produce new shows aimed at social networking's explosive growth — The acting is wooden, the monologue darn near nonexistent. But there's something mildly addicting about Prom Queen …
Michael White / Bloomberg:
Electronic Arts Plays Catch-Up After Shrug-Off of Wii (Update1) — Video-game designer Nick Earl spent eight months holed up with his development team rushing to adapt ``The Godfather'' for Nintendo Co.'s Wii. — The reason for the long hours: Earl's employer, Electronic Arts Inc. …
Clive Thompson / Wired News:
You Grew Up Playing Shoot'em-Up Games. Why Can't Your Kids? — I was playing a round of Gears of War, trying to redo a level on "insane" mode, and the walls were painted with guts. I slaughtered my way to the boss, revved up my chainsaw, and sliced into his chest — releasing a fractal fountain of gore.
Mike / Techdirt:
Why Google Isn't Stealing Newspaper Content — from the make-it-stop dept — This is just getting ridiculous. Google may have signaled its willingness to pay up with its deal with AFP, and now it seems that newspaper publishers are interested in taking them up on the offer.