Top Items:
Ryan Block / Engadget:
Microsoft's new Zunes: officially in 80, 8, and 4GB sizes — We love a good non-mystery around here, and Microsoft's new Zunes are about as un-mysterious as they get. But we also love a good product refresh, and now that the cat's officially out of the bag we can really dig into the new Zunes …
Discussion:
Gizmodo, Windows Connected, Anything But iPod, Mobility Site, Wi-Fi Networking News and Digg
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Jeff Leeds / New York Times:
Microsoft Updates Its iPod Competitor — Microsoft has revamped its slow-selling Zune digital music players and created a MySpace-style social-networking site in its drive to compete with Apple's market-leading iPod player. — In large part, the Microsoft moves announced Tuesday …
Discussion:
Tech Talk with Dean Takahashi, TechCrunch, Business Week, Gizmodo, Gadget Lab, Mobility Site, Scripting News, Memex 1.1 and dailywireless.org
Microsoft:
Zune Drives Next Generation of Digital Music Experience With Community Web Site Built Around Music — Microsoft unveils Zune Social, new Zune devices, innovative Zune software and redesigned Zune Marketplace — all geared toward discovering and sharing new music.
Peter Kafka / Silicon Alley Insider:
Microsoft: Yep, New Zunes. And DRM-Free Music?
Microsoft: Yep, New Zunes. And DRM-Free Music?
Discussion:
Wall Street Journal, Zune-Online.com, Valleywag, Associated Press, 24/7 Wall St., Gizmodo, Daring Fireball, Geek News Central, Engadget and Mashable!
David A. Utter / WebProNews:
Google Preps Postini For Business World — As enamored as the tech world can be with the business to consumer relationships of Web 2.0 applications, Google understands what companies like Microsoft and IBM do - the real money is in business to business relationships.
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Michael Liedtke / Associated Press:
Google boosts corporate e-mail service — SAN FRANCISCO - Google Inc. is sprucing up its corporate e-mail service by adding new security tools and more than doubling the storage capacity of e-mailboxes, underscoring the online search leader's ambition to enlarge its role in the business software market.
Henry Blodget / Silicon Alley Insider:
TechCrunch to Sell to CNET for $100+ Million? — Analyst Doug McIntyre at 24/7 Wall St doesn't have specific thoughts on the valuation, but he makes a persuasive case about why TechCrunch and other big blogs will eventually be bought for big numbers by big media.
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24/7 Wall St.:
TechCrunch And Huffington: Who Will Buy The Big Blogs? — The name brand blogs. The big ones. Huffington. TechCrunch. GigaOm. Boing Boing. Ars Technica. SeekingAlpha. — AOL has already bought Weblogsinc. It owns popular blogs including flagship Engadget.
Michael Arrington / TechCrunch:
Google To $2000/Share? Somebody Muzzle Blodget — Henry Blodget made his name by predicting outlandish price increases for Internet stocks in the late nineties. A lot of people lost a lot of money (or, all their money) by listening to his recommendations.
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Kara Swisher / BoomTown:
Googlestockmania Brought To You By Henry Blodget!
Googlestockmania Brought To You By Henry Blodget!
Discussion:
mathewingram.com/work
Eric Bangeman / Ars Technica:
Sony BMG's chief anti-piracy lawyer: "Copying" music you own is "stealing" — Duluth, Minnesota — Testimony today in Capitol Records, et al v. Jammie Thomas quickly and inadvertently turned to the topic of fair use when Jennifer Pariser, the head of litigation for Sony BMG, was called to the stand to testify.
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Eric Bangeman / Ars Technica:
First RIAA trial gets under way with jury selection, opening statements
First RIAA trial gets under way with jury selection, opening statements
Discussion:
RSS, The Register, Boing Boing, TECH.BLORGE.com, TechSpot News, Geek News Central, Mashable! and Digg
The Jeff Pulver Blog:
I come to Praise Skype, not to Bury Them. — History was made on September 12, 2005 when Skype was purchased by eBay. — And I still stand by the words I posted in my September 12, 2005 blog entry: — "Usually we don't see revolutions until after the fact...I suspect that historians might come …
Jennifer L. Schenker / Business Week:
Microsoft as Media King? — The software giant sees its future in advertising and mobile and is taking the message to Europe—and to Google and Yahoo! — Most people still see Microsoft primarily as a software company, but on Oct. 2 at a media event in Paris, Chief Executive Steve Ballmer painted …
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Paul Miller / Engadget:
Verizon's LG Voyager heads up newly official fall lineup — Verizon isn't kidding around this fall, with four new fashionable phones, a couple of which might divert a few iPhone dollars from archrival AT&T. It's those exact four that Engadget Mobile got the scoop on last weekend, the Juke, Pearl, Venus and Voyager.
Mark Hendrickson / TechCrunch:
It's a Database. It's a Spreadsheet. It's Zoho DB. — Zoho is adding another weapon to its arsenal today - Zoho DB - raising its total number of online office applications to 13 (not including four additional "utilities", or lightweight apps). — Zoho DB is meant to provide developers …
Bradley Steinbacher / Slog:
Anatomy of a Blog Rumor — Yesterday, Jacob Metcalf of the website 8bitjoystick (and occasional Stranger contributor) posted that Bungie, creators of the insanely popular Halo series, is parting ways with its parent company Microsoft. Citing a friend of a friend who was in the know …
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Robert Scoble / Scobleizer:
Steve Ballmer still doesn't understand social networking — A few years ago I wrote to Microsoft's leadership and asked them why they weren't involved in the new Web 2.0 space. I got an answer back that was about 2,000 words long and included the words "business value" 13 times.
Discussion:
Silicon Alley Insider, BoomTown, TechCrunch, innonate, ParisLemon, Darren Herman, Bruce Clay, Inc. Blog, GigaOM, WebProNews, Digital Media Wire, Squash, Leveraging Ideas, loose wire blog, Epicenter, The Globe and Mail, Bokardo, Insider Chatter, Brier Dudley's blog, All about Microsoft, Silicon Valley Blog, Smalltalk Tidbits …, Digital Daily, All Facebook, Times of London, mathewingram.com/work and Facebook Observer
Liz Gannes / NewTeeVee:
Justin.tv Wins Funding, Opens Platform — Justin.tv, a startup that will forever risk coming off as a prolonged publicity stunt rather than a business, is rolling out the platform it's been saying was the point all along. Starting out with founder Justin Kan broadcasting his life 24/7 …
Discussion:
Justin.tv Blog, MARS Magazine, TechCrunch, alarm:clock, VentureBeat, Mashable! and paidContent.org