Top Items:
Eric A. Taub / New York Times:
Sony Cuts PlayStation 3 Prices as Many Xboxes Fail — Facing slower-than-expected sales of its PlayStation 3 video game system, Sony said it would announce Monday that it planned to lower the price of its console in the United States by $100, to $500, effective Thursday.
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KOTV-TV:
New Version Of PlayStation 3 To Go On Sale In August; Sony Cuts Price On Older Model — Sony Corp. announced a revised PlayStation 3 console Monday with a bigger hard drive for storing downloaded content such as video games and high-definition movies. — The new $599 PS3 increases …
Tor Thorsen / GameSpot:
E3 07: 60GB PS3 $499, 80GB due in August — Sony confirms price drop, says new $599 model bundled with MotorStorm coming next month. — [UPDATE] Today, Sony confirmed to GameSpot that a fusillade of reports from US retailers had augured last week. As of July 9, the PlayStation 3's North American price point is going south.
Conrad Quilty-Harper / Engadget:
Sony cuts PS3 price to $499, new $599 80GB model to hit North America in August — Despite denials, Sony has made official the new $499 price point for the PlayStation 3 that we've started to see appear in retailers across the US. The 60GB model's new price point will indeed be $499 …
Discussion:
Inquirer, The Far Side of Technology, ParisLemon, Joystiq, Brandon Live!, Dave Naylor a UK SEO and PlayStation.Blog
Ionut Alex Chitu / Google Operating System:
Improving Google's Social Network — Google already has a social network (orkut), but it's only popular in Brazil and India, doesn't have a Googlish interface and had a lot of security problems in the past. That's why last year Google sponsored a project at the Carnegie Mellon University's …
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Michael Arrington / TechCrunch:
Google, Yahoo Both Working On Next Generation Social Networks
Google, Yahoo Both Working On Next Generation Social Networks
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Reuben Schwarz / Stuff.co.nz:
Hobby leads to career for tech blogger — Wellington is home to a rising star in the highly competitive and global blogging industry. — Richard MacManus runs the world's 28th most popular blog, Read/WriteWeb, from his home office in Lower Hutt. — It's every blogger's fantasy.
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Mary Jo Foley / All about Microsoft:
Vista SP1 beta 1 to launch in mid-July — It's official: We are now in the under-promise and over-deliver era at Microsoft. — Just when Microsoft had customers, partners and competitors all believing that it was going to delay the first service pack for Vista — not releasing a first beta …
Discussion:
Engadget, Inquirer, Softpedia News, LiewCF.com, TechBlog, Neowin.net, GottaBeMobile.com and digg
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Nick Wingfield / Wall Street Journal:
EA Chief Cites Need For More Innovative Games — Electronic Arts Inc. became the world's biggest maker of videogames by relying on a formula now widespread in the industry: pumping out sequels of familiar game franchises, like Madden football, that consumers bought almost on cue.
Richard Wray / Guardian:
Blyk's free mobile launch delayed — The planned launch of Britain's first mobile phone service that offers free calls and texts in return for users accepting adverts on their handsets has been delayed for several months. — Blyk, a start-up run by the former president of the Finnish mobile firm Nokia …
John Markoff / New York Times:
Fixing Typos by Web Users, Without Raising Hackles — David Ulevitch is trying to turn two numbers into a multimillion-dollar business. — The numbers — each composed of a quartet of digits — are just two of the more than four billion unique identifiers, the street addresses of cyberspace …
Ed Burnette / Ed Burnette's Dev Connection:
Apple sneaks Java support onto the iPhone — Despite public comments by Steve Jobs that "Java's not worth building in [to the iPhone]", it turns out that Apple did just that by using an ARM-based CPU that supports Java natively. Programmers cannot (yet) take advantage of this, but Apple could …
Scott Karp / Publishing 2.0:
Wrong On Hyperlocal: Google And Web 1.0 Killed Backfence — There's been a lot of debate about what killed Backfence, the hyperlocal news site. Was it poor design? Lack of incentives for users to generate content? Bad business model? Maybe all of these contributed.
Discussion:
Glass House
Associated Press:
US telecommunications company Verizon's copper cutoff traps customers, hampers rivals — PHILADELPHIA: When Henry Powderly II ordered Verizon Communications Inc.'s FiOS fiber-optic service, he knew he was about to be connected to the future of telecommunications. — He also got unplugged from its past.
Haochi / Googlified:
Google Wall of Ideas — "Google Wall of Ideas" is just another name for "Google Master Plan 2.0". — Develop warp drive to bypass speed of light — IPv7 is cuter — Buyout MSN — Crawler Embedding Unit (Embed a crawler into each human, to index all info in brains)
Robert Scoble / Scobleizer:
Microsoft's top designers leave to give away lovely flowers — This startup makes me sad. Not because it isn't doing beautiful stuff. They are. Maryam will smile when she gets her flowers delivered this morning. UPDATE: she laughed and said "you remembered I love flowers." I guess that's a hint, huh?
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