Top Items:
Business Week:
Universal Music Takes on iTunes — Universal chief Doug Morris is enlisting other big music players for a service to challenge the Jobs juggernaut — Relationships in the entertainment world can be famously fraught. And few are more so these days than the one between Steve Jobs and Universal Music chief Doug Morris.
Discussion:
TechCrunch, Digital Noise, Download Squad, Profy.Com, The Register, Good Morning Silicon Valley, Gizmodo, MacDailyNews, AppScout, Digital Trends, BloggingStocks, Podcasting News, Tech.co.uk, Digital Daily, Contentinople, iLounge, TECH.BLORGE.com, hypebot, Engadget, Hear 2.0, MarketingShift, Macsimum News, Geek News Central, The Unofficial Apple Weblog, Boing Boing Gadgets, Valleywag and Mashable!
RELATED:
Mike Masnick / Techdirt:
Universal Music's Plan To Take On iTunes: Bring Back PressPlay And MusicNow! — from the wait,-that-sounds-familiar... dept — Business Week has the story that Universal Music's Doug Morris is planning to take on iTunes by bringing together the major record labels and having them set …
Mathew / mathewingram.com/work:
Let's force people to take our music — It's hard to know where to start with Universal's rumoured TotalMusic plan, which Business Week has just written about (although as Techdirt points out, Digital Music News first had the story weeks ago). Apparently the idea is to get all the record labels together …
Discussion:
ParisLemon
Nate Anderson / Ars Technica:
Report: Universal prepping revolutionary free music service
Report: Universal prepping revolutionary free music service
Discussion:
Podcasting News
Saul Hansell / Bits:
LinkedIn Plans to Open Up in a Closed Sort of Way — Dan Nye, the chief executive of LinkedIn, has looked closely at the frenzy around Facebook, and has made a crucial decision: There will be no food fights on LinkedIn. — Yes, he's rushing to copy the electronic underpinnings …
Discussion:
WebProNews, Profy.Com, Between the Lines, CNET News.com, Read/WriteWeb, All Facebook, CenterNetworks, muhammad.saleem, Mashable! and Valleywag
Eric Savitz / Tech Trader Daily:
BEA To Oracle: "Your Bid Is Too Low"; This Could Get Ugly — BEA (BEAS) has issued a statement in response to Oracle's (ORCL) unsolicited $17-a-share takeover bid: and they're asserting that the offer is too low. BEA notes that the letter was sent to Oracle yesterday, before the bid was announced.
RELATED:
MarketWatch:
Icahn pitches a gem as Oracle bids for BEA — Commentary: Agitator looks to make $200 million or more from astute pick — LONDON (MarketWatch) — Carl Icahn's still got game. — Less than a month after the activist investor revealed an 8.5% stake in software maker BEA Systems …
Henry Blodget / Silicon Alley Insider:
NYT Adds Reader Comments to Front Page! * — We're always impressed with the New York Times' (NYT) progressive use of its web site, but seeing reader comments above the fold on the Home page was still startling. Hats off to the company's web team for this smart move!
Prince McLean / AppleInsider:
Road to Mac OS X Leopard: Time Machine — Time Machine is one of the most visually prominent new features demonstrated in Mac OS X Leopard, even if the core idea of backups is as old — or perhaps older — than the concept of having any data worthy of being restored.
RELATED:
Robby Stein / Official Gmail Blog:
More Gmail storage coming for all — When people ask me about my job, one of the common questions I get is, "Where does Gmail put all that mail?" I generally answer by pointing them to a web site like this one. While that's not exactly how it works, we do spend a lot of time working …
Discussion:
Googling Google, mathewingram.com/work, Googlified, blognation USA, Webware.com, CyberNet, Download Squad, Gadgetell, Google Operating System, Read/WriteWeb, InfoWorld, Valleywag, Compiler, Digital Inspiration, AppScout, Lifehacker, TechCrunch, InsideGoogle, Mashable!, WebProNews, TECH.BLORGE.com, The Last Podcast, Guardian Unlimited, Search Engine Land, ParisLemon, WinBeta, LucaFiligheddu.com and gSpy
Fox News:
Sen. Susan Collins' Web Ads Run Up Against Google, MoveOn.org — Google claims it was wasn't politics, just company policy that led to it rejecting campaign ads for Republican Sen. Susan Collins, the Internet giant told FOX News on Friday. — Adam Kovacevich, responding to questions via e-mail …
RELATED:
Erick Schonfeld / TechCrunch:
The Clock is Ticking for Joost — There's a time bomb out there with Joost's name on it. Full-screen, broadcast-quality video streams—the main selling point of Joost's peer-to-peer Internet TV client software—is quickly coming to the Web. Brightcove will soon be offering such streams to its video publishers using BitTorrent DNA.
Mary Jo Foley / All about Microsoft:
Windows Update automatically changing user settings (again) — After Patch Tuesday this week (October 9), some Windows Vista users noticed something strange: Windows Update had changed their Automatic Update settings and rebooted their machines automatically without their consent.
Erick Schonfeld / TechCrunch:
Exclusive: MapQuest Plays Catch-Up With Launch of Beta — AOL's MapQuest may be the market-leading map site by a long shot (with 50 million monthly visitors versus 30 million for Google Maps), but it is still playing catch-up when it comes to features, functionality, and mash-up capabilities.
Henry Blodget / Silicon Alley Insider:
Internet Recession Watch: Falling Ads, Taxes, Housing — New Items: The reprieve of the past 10 days is over. Yesterday, Nielsen reported that spending by the top 10 web customers dropped in September vs. August. Homebuilder Beazer said that a whopping 68% of customer sales contracts were cancelled in Q3.
Matthew Karnitschnig / Wall Street Journal:
Business Magazines' Issues: Ad Slump, Web, New Rival — For many decades, publishers of business magazines such as BusinessWeek, Fortune and Forbes thrived by following a simple formula: Target upscale executives and sell ad space to auto makers, financial-services firms and technology companies.