Top Items:
John Markoff / New York Times:
Hewlett Introduces a Web Feature to Make Document Printing Mobile — Hoping to alleviate a frustration of mobile computing, Hewlett-Packard has quietly introduced a free service designed to make it possible to print documents on any printer almost anywhere in the world.
Cleve Nettles / 9 to 5 Mac:
iPod Nano Colors — Just a little tidbit for the weekend to munch on... Our sources in China have just confirmed an earlier inside Apple report that the new Nano colors will be: — The screen takes up about 1/2 the surface area.... They look almost exactly like our mockup except the Nano won't be available in white.
Miguel Helft / New York Times:
Ad Growth for AOL Called Vital to a Remake — Just over a year ago, AOL unveiled a radical plan to remake itself into a business built on advertising from one driven by Internet access subscriptions. — To a great extent, AOL had little choice in the matter.
iTNews Australia:
The Red Shift Theory — Red Shift Theory is Sun's thesis about the explosive growth in demand for raw computing power—but is it more than the utility computing model warmed over? — For nearly a decade as chief technology officer at Sun Microsystems, Greg Papadopoulos has mulled the best …
Villu Arak / Heartbeat:
What happened on August 16 — On Thursday, 16th August 2007, the Skype peer-to-peer network became unstable and suffered a critical disruption. The disruption was initiated by a massive restart of our user's computers across the globe within a very short timeframe as they re-booted after receiving a routine software update.
Om Malik / NewTeeVee:
Building B Builds A God Box For Internet Video — Building B became the latest startup to join the Internet video set-top box sweepstakes today with the Belmont, Calif.-based company's announcement that it has developed a video god box capable of marrying traditional television with video-on-demand and Web video.
Dan Farber / ZDNet:
Workday unveils Financials and Work Tags — Since Workday publicly appeared on the scene in January 2006, it has been self-described as a "revolutionary application platform and the next generation of business applications to drive your enterprise's performance," with applications that will be …
Dan Farber / Between the Lines:
Waiting for Zuckerberg — Much has been written lately about open standards and APIs for social networks, allowing users to sprinkled and manage their social graphs (circle of friends and business associates) across disparate services-a kind of decentralized and more accessible, rather than siloed, social graph.
Discussion:
andrewmager.com
Reuters:
Microsoft cuts Xbox 360 prices in Europe — AMSTERDAM (Reuters) - Microsoft Corp (MSFT.O) is cutting the European price for its Xbox 360 video game console by 50 euros to 349.99 euros ($470), following a similar cut in the United States. — The company said in a statement on Monday …
Discussion:
Neowin.net
Charles Jade / Ars Technica:
HandBrake v0.9.0 for Mac OS X — Back in April, HandBrake and MediaFork were merged into one terrific program for the legitimate transference of DVD video to other formats, and other things. Now, just 121 days after HandBrake V08.5b1 was released, a new decimal-point release has arrived.
Discussion:
The Unofficial Apple Weblog
Chope / the blip.tv blog:
Loren Feldman, 1938 Media, and blip.tv — Yesterday, Loren Feldman, the author of a controversial video, decided to use blip as his host. A few hours later we received a letter warning us of potential damage to our brand. I responded that speech should be countered with speech, not censorship.
Gregg Keizer / Computerworld:
Identity attack spreads; 1.6M records stolen from Monster.com — Convincing phishing mail seeds bank account-stealing Trojan and 'ransomware' — The 46,000 people reportedly infected by ads on job sites may be only a fraction of the victims of an ambitious, multi-stage attack that's stolen data belonging …
Evan Blass / Engadget:
How would you change Windows Vista? — What do you get when you take a product used by hundreds of millions of people every day, add a few new features / polish up the interface, and then try to get everyone to shell out a grip of money for this delay- and bug- plagued upgrade?
Tim O'Reilly / O'Reilly Radar:
Carl Malamud Takes on WestLaw — Carl Malamud has this funny idea that public domain information ought to be... well, public. He has a history of creating public access databases on the net when the provider of the data has failed to do so or has licensed its data only to a private company that provides it only for pay.