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11:30 AM ET, August 8, 2007

Techmeme

 Top Items: 
Google News Blog:
Perspectives about the news from people in the news  —  We wanted to give you a heads-up on a new, experimental feature we'll be trying out on the Google News home page.  Starting this week, we'll be displaying reader comments on stories in Google News, but with a bit of a twist...
RELATED:
Danny Sullivan / Search Engine Land:
Google News To Newsmakers: Send Us Your Comments  —  Weird.  That's the only way I can describe it.  Google News is asking people who are in news stories to email them comments about the story, which will be associated with those articles.  From the Google News Blog post:
Philipp Lenssen / Google Blogoscoped:
Google News Adds (Special) Comments  —  Google News USA is rolling out an experimental feature that lets people or organizations who are part of a news story add a comment to the news.  "Our long-term vision is that any participant will be able to send in their comments, and we'll show them next to the articles about the story.
Ionut Alex Chitu / Google Operating System:
Google News Adds Comments  —  Google News is useful if you want to read all the related articles in a single view and to get an unbiased overview of the most important stories, but it lacks interactivity and user participation.  To change this, the news site will allow comments, but only from people involved in a story.
Arnold Zafra / Search Engine Journal:
Google News to Add Reader Comments
Discussion: Mashable!
Jack Schofield / Guardian Unlimited:   Google invites the people featured in news stories to comment
Jessica E. Vascellaro / Wall Street Journal:
Hearst Set to Buy Shoppers Site Kaboodle  —  Hearst Corp. plans to announce today its plans to acquire closely held start-up Kaboodle Inc., a service for sharing shopping recommendations and style advice online.  —  The deal marks Hearst's attempt to tap a new area of e-commerce …
RELATED:
Eric Eldon / VentureBeat:
Forbes buys social bookmarking site Clipmarks  —  Clipmarks, one of the many startups that helps users collect and organize information from around the web, is being bought by Forbes Magazine, an inside source tells us.  —  The New York-based startup lets you select text, photos or videos on web pages …
Om Malik / GigaOM:
Big Media Is Buying, Hearst goes Kaboodle  —  Updated: First it was News Corp., then CondeNast and CBS Interactive.  Now Hearst Corp. and Forbes have joined the Web 2.0 party, snapping up tiny start-ups, and trying to capture the ongoing online shift of both audiences and advertising dollars.
Michael Arrington / TechCrunch:
Hearst Acquires Kaboodle for $30+ million
Discussion: CenterNetworks
Richard MacManus / Read/WriteWeb:
Social Shopping Startup Kaboodle Acquired by Hearst - And It's Easy to See Why...
Matt Marshall / VentureBeat:
People search engine Spock launches  —  Spock, the Redwood City, Calif. search engine for people, launches tomorrow after a year of suspense.  —  It has remained secretive for months (see our original coverage), testing its engine, adding some 100,000 profiles and inserting other social networking features.
RELATED:
Greg Sterling / Search Engine Land:
People Search Engine Spock Goes Live  —  In the increasingly popular category of "people search" much-anticipated new search engine Spock launched with a public beta today.  It's running very slowly this morning and so it has been challenging to use.  However Spock joins a growing list of …
Nick Gonzalez / TechCrunch:
Spock Open Public Beta
Discussion: Business Week
Charles Cooper / CNET News.com:
Spock: Search's final frontier?
Discussion: Lifehacker
Andrew Catton / Dabble DB:
Introducing Dabble Do  —  We're very happy to announce our second product: Dabble Do, a social to-do list.  —  THE INTERACTION'S THE THING  —  With social to-dos, it's all about the interactions.  Everyone has their own list of the items assigned to them.
RELATED:
Michael Arrington / TechCrunch:
The Fascination With ToDo Lists Continues
Discussion: mathewingram.com/work
Nick Wingfield / Wall Street Journal:
Apple's New iMacs Aim for Windows Users  —  CUPERTINO, Calif. — Apple Inc., known in recent years for its eye-catching iPod and iPhone gadgets, moved to return attention to its heritage — computers — with a new line of consumer machines and software aimed at winning over more users of Windows-based PCs.
RELATED:
Jonathan Ratner / FP Trading Desk:
Apple expected to sell 2 million Macs in Q4, RBC updates iPhone checks
Discussion: Macsimum News
Justin Berka / Infinite Loop:
Apple event features rare Q&A with Jobs and other executives
Discussion: Apple 2.0
Matt Stump / OneTRAK:
FiOS entry in Massachusetts doesn't uniformly wound competitors  —  An examination of wireline video subscriber patterns in 34 Massachusetts cities and towns after the introduction of Verizon Inc.'s FiOS TV reveals three early takeaways:  —  Initial incumbent cable subscriber losses can exceed 10%.
RELATED:
Om Malik / GigaOM:
Who's afraid of FiOS?
Discussion: CrunchGear and 24/7 Wall St.
RELATED:
Microsoft Help and Support:
An update is available that improves the performance and reliability …
Andy Greenberg / Forbes:
Middle America, Meet The Hackers  —  Don't try to hack the hackers.  —  That's what Dateline NBC's Associate Producer Michelle Madigan learned at this year's DefCon, the largest gathering of hackers, crackers and security professionals in the world.  Going undercover, she hoped …
Discussion: Tech_Space and IT
Jason / Signal vs. Noise:
How Apple's small things influence their big things  —  It's cool how Apple's design language keeps evolving.  One product design follows another.  There's a continuity this way, yet things continue to feel new.  And it's interesting how their small designs influence their large designs.
Jonathan Fildes / BBC:
Putting electronics in a spin  —  When engineers flick the switch to turn on the world's fastest supercomputer later this year it will be capable of chewing its way through 1,000 trillion calculations every year.  —  But this speedy number cruncher could soon look like the equivalent …
Discussion: Neowin.net
Stephen J. Dubner / Freakonomics:
Moving Day  —  After two and a half years of camping out at Freakonomics.com, after more than 1,300 posts and many thousands of reader comments, this blog is moving.  From now on, we will reside here at NYTimes.com.  If you are a new reader, welcome.  If you are an old reader …
Discussion: rexblog.com
 
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 More Items: 
Martin LaMonica / CNET News.com:
Oracle contributes Linux code, expands hardware support
Discussion: PC World
The Register:
Cameraman drops first YouTube suit to join class action
Discussion: The Utube Blog
Adam Thompson / Wall Street Journal:
ESPN Calls a Do-Over On Its Online-Video Site
John Leyden / The Register:
FaceTime inadvertently exposes customer contact info
Darren Murph / Engadget:
US Air Force takes delivery of micro unmanned aircrafts
Discussion: The Register
Kevin J. Delaney / Wall Street Journal:
YouTube Magic: Now You See It, Now You Don't  —  LOS GATOS …
Darren Murph / Engadget:
NTT's HC-1000 puts you in control of home security
 Earlier Items: 
Dave Caolo / The Unofficial Apple Weblog:
iPhones ready for web gallery now
Nick Gonzalez / TechCrunch:
Scrybe Closes Series A
Ben Kuchera / Opposable Thumbs:
360 Cores and Premiums with HDMI? An inside source spills the beans
Mendelson Tiu / Smarthouse:
Palm Treo 750 Updates To Windows Mobile 6
Discussion: istartedsomething and Engadget
Peter Kafka / Silicon Alley Insider:
MySpace Adds The Onion
Discussion: CNET News.com and Mashable!
Kevin Kelleher / GigaOM:
Will Credit Crunch Help Or Hurt Tech Cos?
 

 
From Mediagazer:

Caitlin Huston / The Hollywood Reporter:
Internal memo: Hearst Magazines president announces layoffs as part of a decision to “reallocate resources” to “continue our focus on digital innovation”

Mark Sweney / The Guardian:
National World, one of the UK's biggest newspaper groups, gets a £56.2M buyout offer from shareholder Media Concierge, a 40% premium to its Nov. 21 stock price

Max Goldbart / Deadline:
The English Premier League ends its content partnership with IMG and plans to bring content production and distribution in-house in 2026

 
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