Top Items:
Erick Schonfeld / TechCrunch:
Adobe Raises The Stakes For Web Documents With Buzzword and Share — The list of companies offering free, Web-based word processors just got longer. Today, Adobe is entering the Webtop game (watch out, Microsoft Office) with its announcement that it will purchase Boston-based startup Virtual Ubiquity, the company behind Buzzword.
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Rafe Needleman / Webware.com:
MICROSOFT, ADOBE LAUNCH DOCUMENT SHARING SERVICES — Microsoft and Adobe are announcing, at exactly the same time, competing services for sharing documents from your computer. Adobe's Share converts all shared documents to Flash, so you can embed them in any Web page.
Discussion:
Read/WriteWeb
Rafe Needleman / Webware.com:
ADOBE'S NEW WORD PROCESSOR: GORGEOUS BUT UNDERPOWERED — Adobe has acquired Virtual Ubiquity's BuzzWord, a Web-based Flash word processor (news story). There are a lot of online productivity suites and apps right now—see Google, Zoho, ThinkFree, for example. What does BuzzWord offer?
Discussion:
Read/WriteWeb
Michael Arrington / TechCrunch:
Facebook To Launch Friend Grouping. Competition Can Suck. — So Facebook will finally allow users to group friends and control information flow based on friend type. For guys like Robert Scoble, who have 5,000 friends (the limit), this may be a way to finally sort through the real friends from the fans.
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Julie Sloane / Wired News:
Selling Ads on Facebook Is a Tempting but Risky Business
Selling Ads on Facebook Is a Tempting but Risky Business
Discussion:
How To Split An Atom, Insider Chatter, Fortune, CenterNetworks, Mashable! and The Startup Game
Thoughtfix / TabletBlog.com:
Third Internet Tablet a slider - Confirmed! — Remember the photo above from Engadget? Click that link for more of them. Well - there's now a VERY good chance that it could be an early prototype of the third Internet Tablet. So this whole post was probably wrong.
Alexander Wolfe / InformationWeek:
Apple Users Talking Class-Action Lawsuit Over iPhone Locking — You bought the iPhone, you paid for it, but now Apple is telling you how you have to use it, and if you don't do things they way they say, they're going to lock it. Turn it into a useless "brick." Is this any way to treat a customer?
Discussion:
Mashable!, Rough Type, IP Telephony, VoIP, Broadband, Life On the Wicked Stage and Memex 1.1
Jesus Diaz / Gizmodo:
Breaking: How to Unbrick an iPhone (Confirmed: Apps Are Back, but Unlocked Phones Still Can't Call) — Only three days after Apple killed it, the JesusPhone walks again, but it doesn't talk again: By downgrading your firmware from 1.1.1 to 1..2 using the method below, all iPhones can get use …
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Evan Blass / Engadget:
Ginormous RAZR 2 crashes into Mercedes, film at eleven — They sure do look beautiful flying in formation during their annual migration, but when one of Illinois's rare Aves Razeruses crashes and burns on a busy Moscow street corner, well, it's never a pretty sight. Check out another pic of the carnage after the break...
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Dan York / Disruptive Telephony:
How using Skype disrupted my hotel Internet connection and locked me out — UPDATE: I have now posted some additional thoughts about this issue. — It's been a frustrating time here at the hotel in Ontario, CA, where all I've been trying to do is use the Internet connection.
David Chartier / Infinite Loop:
Apple posts iPhone Human Interface Guidelines — The iPhone may be limited to running web apps and services instead of true native apps for now, but Apple can still give developers a nudge in the right direction when designing their UI and experience. A new iPhone Human Interface Guidelines …
Garr / Presentation Zen:
Learning from Bill Gates & Steve Jobs — It's been almost two years since I wrote this post comparing the approaches to presentation by Bill Gates and Steve Jobs. Since PowerPoint 2007 has been out quite a while now I wondered if Bill Gates' visuals and delivery have improved along with the software.
Financial Times:
FT.com pioneers change to charging — FT.com, the internet arm of the Financial Times, will on Monday announce an innovative charging system and a major expansion of the site, fuelling debate about newspapers' online business models. — Newspapers have until now chosen between offering their content free …
Howard Owens:
Twelve things journalists can do to save journalism — Begin with this premise: Newspaper journalism is structured around the packaged goods nature of news on print. — We have developed "news judgement" (how important a story is) based on our need to order news within the confines of a certain package size and design.
Discussion:
Invisible Inkling
Dave Winer / Scripting News:
Payloads for Twitter, round two — On Friday evening I wrote a piece about integrating images, audio and perhaps other types with Twitter. There's been a bit of reaction, not too much, I think because most of the people who are adversarial about this kind of stuff either don't use Twitter, or because it's the weekend.