Top Items:
Olga Kharif / Business Week:
Why Wi-Fi Networks Are Floundering — Faced with weak user demand, AT&T and other telecoms are vowing to tear up their muni Wi-Fi contracts if cities don't foot more of the bill — The static crackling around municipal wireless networks is getting worse.
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Eric Bangeman / Ars Technica:
DIRECTV plugs into broadband over power line — One of the biggest competitive problems for satellite TV providers is that they cannot directly compete with the triple-play bundles of voice, video, and data that cable companies and telecoms offer their customers.
Discussion:
Alice Hill's Real Tech News
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Cynthia Brumfield / IP Democracy:
DirecTV to Partner with Current on BPL — Now that municipal Wi-Fi networks have been discredited as viable technologies for mounting a third broadband pipeline into the home, all we're left with in the short-term is an even more difficult technology, broadband-over-power-lines (BPL).
Discussion:
dslreports.com
Michael Arrington / TechCrunch:
Facebook + iPhone = UltraCool — A pairing of the two most hyped tech products of the year: Facebook released what is arguably the single best iPhone-customized website to date at iphone.facebook.com. Like the Netvibes iPhone site which launched late yesterday, it isn't much to look at in a normal browser.
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Candace Lombardi / Webware.com:
HARPERCOLLINS OFFERING EXCERPTS FOR IPHONE — Publisher Harper Collins released digital excerpts from 14 books on Wednesday that can be read from an Apple iPhone. — The digital excerpts are accessible from a special HarperCollins mobile Web site that can be accessed from the iPhone's Safari Web browser.
Alex Iskold / Read/WriteWeb:
How JavaScript is Slowing Down the Web (And What To Do About It) — A single line of JavaScript is what powers a lot of blogging technologies these days. Widgets, sharing tools, visitors tracking, advertisers. In many cases a single line of JavaScript is all that a blogger needs to add a new technology to their blog.
Discussion:
BlueBlog
Gillian Wee / Bloomberg:
Time Warner Cable to Expand Video-on-Demand This Year — Aug. 13 (Bloomberg) — Time Warner Cable Inc., the second- largest U.S. cable company, plans to expand a service that lets viewers watch shows when they want as long as they sit through the commercials.
Discussion:
CrunchGear
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Staci D. Kramer / paidContent.org:
Time Warner Cable To Try No-Fee, No Ad-Skip Time Shifting
Time Warner Cable To Try No-Fee, No Ad-Skip Time Shifting
Discussion:
dslreports.com
Eric Bangeman / Ars Technica:
Report: Cable companies facing big bandwidth crunch — If you're starting to become frustrated with the download speed of your cable ISP or the relatively low number of HD channels available, you ain't seen nothin' yet. Your local cable provider will soon be faced with a serious bandwidth crunch …
Jeff Leeds / New York Times:
They've Just Got to Get a Message to You — As a teenage rock fan, all Dennis Vorreyer really expected of the Lollapalooza music festival in Chicago two weekends ago was the chance to see his favorite bands perform live. — But he and his father, Jeffrey, who accompanied him to the festival …
Nick Gonzalez / TechCrunch:
Movable Type's Version 4.0 Final Release — Movable Type is releasing the final version of their 4.0 platform tonight. We covered the beta, their turn towards open source, and new feature set previously. The new release, no doubt, comes under pressure from the success Wordpress has had as an open source platform.
Discussion:
Read/WriteWeb
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Inquirer:
Channel grumbles over further AMD Barcelona delays — Another glitch hits flagship microprocessor — SYSTEM INTEGRATORS who were told to expect supplies of AMD Barcelona processors during mid-August said there's a hitch which is preventing AMD from delivering on its promises.
Discussion:
24/7 Wall St.
USA Today:
How many trees did your iPhone bill kill? — LOS ANGELES — Early adopters of Apple's iPhone are getting their first service bills from AT&T (ATT) — and some customers say they are so detailed they belong in libraries. — Justine Ezarik, a Pittsburgh graphic designer and active Internet blogger, got her first bill on Saturday.
Discussion:
Open (finds, minds …
John Leyden / The Register:
Intel and Symantec team up on 'bare metal' security — Virtualisation tech pushes security functions onto chips — Symantec and Intel have teamed up to develop security technologies that operate underneath an operating system. — Project Hood uses virtualisation technology developed …
Discussion:
Reuters
Scott Karp / Publish2 Blog:
Introducing Publish2: Networked News — It's time to pull the curtain up on our new venture, Publish2, Inc. — Publish2 is a social media company, on the eve of launching in Beta — the purpose of this announcement is to explain our vision, what we're building, who's involved …
Discussion:
Publishing 2.0, Invisible Inkling, howardowens.com, BuzzMachine, Chip Griffin and GigaOM
Riva Richmond / Wall Street Journal:
Yahoo Banks on SmartAds To Lift Display Business — In the middle of Yahoo Inc.'s plan to reinvigorate its big, sluggish display-advertising business lies a new breed of diminutive, chameleon-like advertisements. — The ads, which the Internet giant began offering to travel-industry advertisers …
Ingrid Lunden / paidContent.org:
Hearst's UK Jellyfish Goes Belly Up — Well, you can't blame them for trying...Hearst's UK division Natmags has axed its digital-only magazine Jellyfish after a five-month trial, citing distribution challenges. The celebrity/fashion title had been sent out via email, but spam filters …
Steve O'Hear / The Social Web:
Bebo overtakes MySpace in the UK — Comscore data for July reveals that Bebo is now the number one visited social networking site in the UK, overtaking MySpace. Sitting in third place is Facebook. According to the statistics, Bebo registered a total of 10.7m unique users ahead of MySpace which has 10.1m and Facebook with 7.6m.
Discussion:
Mashable!
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Caroline McCarthy / CNET News.com:
Across the pond, Bebo leaps ahead of MySpace?
Across the pond, Bebo leaps ahead of MySpace?
Discussion:
Webware.com
BBC:
Tiny wind engines cool computers — Minuscule wind engines could help to take computing power to the next level, scientists believe. — US researchers have developed a prototype device that creates a "breeze" made up of charged particles, or ions, to cool computer chips.
Discussion:
Gizmodo