Top Items:
Microsoft:
Microsoft Launches Windows Live Hotmail Worldwide — Built from the ground up, the new Windows Live Hotmail is now safer, more powerful and available virtually anywhere. — Microsoft Corp. today announced that Windows Live™ Hotmail®, the successor to MSN® Hotmail, is launching globally in 36 languages.
RELATED:
Ina Fried / CNET News.com:
MOUNTAIN VIEW, Calif.—Microsoft had been tinkering with Windows Live Mail for months, but testers still weren't happy. — The program was too slow to load, too different and, well, just not like the old Hotmail it was intended to replace. — It was a painful realization for the more than 100 managers and developers on the project.
Valleywag:
Exclusive: Photobucket goes to Myspace — Like a squabbling couple finally realizing they can't live without eachother — or a parasite fusing with its host — Photobucket has concluded terms of a sale to Myspace, News Corporation's social network. The photo sharing service …
RELATED:
Pete Cashmore / Mashable!:
Breaking: Photobucket Acquired By MySpace — It's the deal you never thought would happen: MySpace acquiring Photobucket, the "parasite" that fed off MySpace traffic and hosted a massive number of MySpace photos. There's no word on whether the $300M price tag, which Photobucket was being shopped around for, was met.
Eric Auchard / Reuters:
NBC Universal sides against YouTube in piracy suit — SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) - NBC Universal is taking sides with fellow media conglomerate Viacom Inc. over a piracy lawsuit filed against Google Inc.'s online video sharing site YouTube, according to papers filed in court.
RELATED:
Elizabeth M. Gillespie / Business Week:
Dell signs on with Microsoft, Novell — Dell Inc. has agreed to work with Microsoft Corp. and Novell Inc. under an alliance the rival software makers formed last year to make it easier for the Windows operating system and the increasingly popular Linux system to work together, the companies said Sunday.
RELATED:
Sunday Times:
Name and shame offensive bloggers — If imitation is the sincerest form of flattery then Fred Khumalo and I should feel very flattered indeed. — Every day there are 120000 new blog sites registered — a staggering 43 million a year. According to blog search engine Technorati …
RELATED:
Vinny Lingham / Vinny Lingham's Blog:
Offline Print Journalist calls Bloggers "Wackos who gun down their fellow students"
Offline Print Journalist calls Bloggers "Wackos who gun down their fellow students"
Discussion:
Online Media Cultist
Greg Sterling / Search Engine Land:
Pew Research: 'Web 2.0' Crowd A Small Minority — The Pew Internet & American Life Project just released the findings of a new survey of 4,001 U.S. adults that segments Americans into a range of groups based on usage of and attitudes toward the Internet and mobile phones.
RELATED:
Duncan Riley / TechCrunch:
America: The Growing Digital Divide
America: The Growing Digital Divide
Discussion:
Between the Lines, TeleRead, Online Media Cultist, Alec Saunders .LOG and NevilleHobson.com
Mark Ward / BBC:
Beating Warcraft at its own game — Technology Correspondent, BBC News website — With more than eight million subscribers, World of Warcraft dominates the online gaming market but some strong rivals are gearing up to take it on. — Gaute Godoger, game director at Funcom …
Discussion:
WOW Insider
Dan Farber / Between the Lines:
Comcast goes with Zimbra for new collaboration suite — Comcast plans to launch SmartZone, a major replacement for its current and uninspired consumer email service. At the core of SmartZone is a new version of Zimbra's open source, brower-based collaborative suite that includes email, instant messaging and voice mail access.
Andrew Adam Newman / New York Times:
Book Not Ready for Print? You Can Whip Up an Audiobook for a Podcast for Now — When you are a budding author and you appear on television, it is sure to enhance book sales. — But what do you do if your book is not even written, never mind in stores? — For Mignon Fogarty …
benedelman.org:
How Spyware-Driven Forced Visits Inflate Web Site Traffic Counts — The usual motive for buying spyware popup traffic is simple: Showing ads. Cover Netflix's site with an ad for Blockbuster, and users may buy from Blockbuster instead. Same for other spyware advertisers.
Robert Scoble / Scobleizer:
Fear of Google — Yesterday, during his speech at the Forbes shindig I attended, Geoff Ramsey, CEO of eMarketer's funniest remark was when he told us that the "Fear of Google" was so prevelent that it even had a three-letter acronymn: FOG. — Anyway, I've been hearing more and more about FOG …
Laura M. Holson / New York Times:
Hollywood Loves the Tiny Screen. Advertisers Don't. — Superman has the power to leap tall buildings. But leaping onto a cellphone screen is proving a little trickier. — Warner Brothers recently created a six-episode series of short videos for mobile devices based on the popular Superman television show, "Smallville."
Discussion:
Andy Beal's Marketing Pilgrim, mocoNews.net, Mark Evans and The Mobile Technology Weblog
Saul Hansell / New York Times:
Beam It Down From the Web, Scotty — PASADENA, Calif. — Sometimes a particular piece of plastic is just what you need. You have lost the battery cover to your cellphone, perhaps. Or your daughter needs to have the golden princess doll she saw on television. Now.
Nik Cubrilovic / New Web Order:
Switching Back — I have been using Mac OSX as my primary OS for almost a year now, but last night I switched back. What spurred it is that my Mac OSX partition crashed and it wouldn't boot back into the OS - I used rescue tools and drive scanners but it appears that the partition just dissapeared.