Top Items:
USA Today:
Q&A with Jobs: 'That's what happens in technology' — It's not every day you slice the price of a popular product by one-third. — But Apple CEO Steve Jobs did just that Wednesday with the iPhone. By the end of the day, the combination cellphone, iPod and Internet device was available for $399, down from $599.
Discussion:
Infinite Loop, Epicenter, Terry Heaton's PoMo Blog, TechBlog, The Unofficial Apple Weblog, iLounge, Russell Beattie's Weblog, The Boy Genius Report, Mark Evans, The iPhone Blog, Mickeleh's Take, Gizmodo, Vindu's View from the Valley, Valleywag, IP Telephony, VoIP, Broadband, mocoNews.net, paidContent.org, Webomatica, Guardian Unlimited and Josh Bancroft's …
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Michael Arrington / TechCrunch:
Nokia Marketing Team Reaches Out To Angry iPhone Users — Nokia's marketing department did some quick thinking yesterday. They're targeting iPhone users who are angry about the fact that they paid $200 more for their phone than they would have if they waited.
USA Today:
Some early iPhone buyers irked; others have no regrets — AN FRANCISCO — Some of the first iPhone buyers were divided about the news that Apple is slashing its price by $200, barely two months after the cellphone was launched. — Apple on Wednesday announced the lower price, $399 …
Erica Sadun / The Unofficial Apple Weblog:
Apple screwed you: So now what? — The $200 price drop isn't going over well with readers. So here are a few TUAW tips for how to handle this situation: — Returns. If you're within the first 14 days of purchase, you're golden. Go back to the store and raise hell.
Barry Schwartz / Search Engine Land:
Google Fight: Nokia & Apple Ads Trade Blows Over iPhone Price Cut
Google Fight: Nokia & Apple Ads Trade Blows Over iPhone Price Cut
Mihai Parparita / Official Google Reader Blog:
"We found it!" — Here's a search box: — Search in Reader — Doesn't seem all that special, does it? Most Google sites have it. But let's look at where it is: — That's right, search is finally in Google Reader. Now you can find that that apricot recipe you came across a few months ago and now have a craving for.
Discussion:
Josh Bancroft's …, Search Engine Land, Download Squad, WebProNews, CyberNet Technology News, The Webpreneur, Matt Cutts, TechCrunch, Compiler, WebMetricsGuru, cruel to be kind, Library clips, Read/WriteWeb, Lifehacker, Google Operating System, jkOnTheRun, Search Engine Journal, Searchviews, UNEASYsilence, Life On the Wicked Stage, franticindustries and Laughing Squid
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Ionut Alex Chitu / Google Operating System:
Google Reader Adds Search — As mentioned in the previous post, Google Reader is now mature. But how could it mature be without having a search feature? The wait is over: Google Reader finally added search. — You can search all your feeds, the feeds from a folder or the posts from a single feed.
Philip Fung / Facebook Blog:
Public Search Listings on Facebook … Starting today, we are making limited public search listings available to people who are not logged in to Facebook. We're expanding search so that people can see which of their friends are on Facebook more easily. The public search listing contains less information …
Discussion:
Today @ PC World, Insider Chatter, Epicenter, InformationWeek, Vanessa Fox. Nude., Rev2.org, SEOspace, John Battelle's Searchblog, VentureBeat, Inside the Marketers Studio, Bubblegeneration Strategy Lab, WebProNews, Charles Hudson's Weblog, Andy Beard, The Technology Chronicles, A Media Circus, Squash, Digital Inspiration, Compiler, Searchviews, Salon: Machinist, Valleywag, Computerworld and Search Engine Land
Brad Stone / New York Times:
Are Books Passé? Web Giants Envision the Next Chapter — Technology evangelists have predicted the emergence of electronic books for as long as they have envisioned flying cars and video phones. It is an idea that has never caught on with mainstream book buyers.
Discussion:
Between the Lines, Download Squad, Business Week, jkOnTheRun, TeleRead, paidContent.org and 24/7 Wall St.
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Michael Arrington / TechCrunch:
Amazon & Google To Enter eBook Business — The New York Times is reporting that both Amazon and Google are entering the eBook business this year, joining Sony and others who already have products (the image to the right is Sony's Reader). — The new Amazon product and service will be called …
Peter Kafka / Silicon Alley Insider:
e-Books, Yet Again — Amazon Gears Up To Fail
e-Books, Yet Again — Amazon Gears Up To Fail
Discussion:
TeleRead
Wall Street Journal:
Download This: YouTube Phenom Has a Big Secret — Singer Marié Digby Isn't — Quite What She Appears; — 'Make People Like Me' — A 24-year-old singer and guitarist named Marié Digby has been hailed as proof that the Internet is transforming the world of entertainment.
Dan Farber / Between the Lines:
Zoho preps Business edition — Zoho is prepping a Business edition of its on demand software suite aimed at small and medium-sized businesses.This new version will compete with Google Apps, which includes only email, calendar, chat, document and spreadsheet applications, and administrative functions, for $50 per user per year.
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Charles Jade / Infinite Loop:
Mac BU prepares "sneak peek" of Office 2008 for Mac — Back at Macworld in January, I got a carefully-controlled look at the Mac Office 2008 beta. This did not include a tour of Entourage—large, widget-like notification application excepted. Nine months and a delayed release date for Mac Office later …
Discussion:
InfoWorld
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Darren Murph / Engadget:
Microsoft's Media Center to support four CableCARDs — Hot on the heels of finding out who Microsoft chose to buddy up with for its Extenders for Windows Media Center comes word that the software itself will support up to four CableCARDs in a single configuration.
Discussion:
Gizmodo
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David Pogue / New York Times:
High-Speed Video Store in the Living Room — If you had to make a master list of all the world's problems, "limited access to movies" probably wouldn't appear until page 273,996. — Truth is, life is teeming with opportunities to see movies: movie theaters, video stores, DVD-by-mail services …
Peter Ha / CrunchGear:
Sony's Latest Alpha DSLR Officially Unveiled — As expected Sony finally pulled the sheet back on the Alpha DSLR that's been buzzing around the Web. The A700, after perusing the specs, doesn't seem to be anything spectacular, but it does have a few redeeming qualities. I think.
Discussion:
PC World