Top Items:
Stuart Elliott / New York Times:
Student's Ad Gets a Remake, and Makes the Big Time — The idea that you do not have to be a professional to create a good commercial is becoming widespread, in a trend known as consumer-generated content. Leave it to Apple to — paraphrasing the company's old slogan a bit — think differently.
Discussion:
Digital Media Wire, Infinite Loop, CrunchGear, iLounge, TIME: Nerd World, Valleywag, Mashable! and MediaBytes with Shelly …
Duncan Riley / TechCrunch:
Mac OSX Leopard: Worth The Wait — The long wait for the latest version of Apple' OSX operating system comes to an end today for millions of Mac fans worldwide. OSX Leopard goes on sale in retail stores at 6pm, although others will receive it earlier by pre-order and courier delivery.
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David Pogue / New York Times:
More Goodies in Apple's New Operating System
More Goodies in Apple's New Operating System
Discussion:
AppleInsider, Webomatica, theory.isthereason, TechSpot News, The Apple Core and CNET News.com
Peter Lauria / New York Post:
MYSPACE LOVE$ FACEBOOK VALUE — If Facebook is worth $15 billion, then MySpace is worth $65 billion. — That's the take of RBC Capital Markets analyst David Bank, who applied the $357 Microsoft ascribed to each of Facebook's 42 million registered users in Wednesday's deal …
Discussion:
Insider Chatter, HipMojo.com, Digital Daily, All Facebook, Deal Journal and Silicon Alley Insider
Anne Broache / CNET News.com:
Senate OKs 7 more years of tax-free Net access, e-mail — Scarcely a week before an existing ban on Internet access taxes is set to expire, the U.S. Senate late on Thursday voted to let it live on for seven more years. — The compromise bill, which was approved by a voice vote …
Discussion:
Andy Beal's Marketing Pilgrim, DSLreports, Ars Technica, Reuters, Macsimum News, Computerworld, Mashable!, RSS, Neowin.net and Slashdot
Karl / DSLreports:
AT&T Wants $300 From Wildfire Victim - They didn't think to grab their Dish network receiver... I was hit hard by the floods in the Northeast last year. Everything I owned was destroyed by eight feet of raging mud water. Obviously, mud and electronics do not play well together …
Discussion:
Good Morning Silicon Valley, IP Telephony, VoIP, Broadband, Geek News Central and CrunchGear
Stan Schroeder / Mashable!:
Fastest Growing Facebook Group Now Has A Million Members — Unfortunately, the fastest growing Facebook group ever is not a very spontaneous affair; it's part of a US presidential candidate's campaign. However, the results are quite astonishing. — Responding to Barack Obama's Facebook …
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Ionut Alex Chitu / Google Operating System:
SearchMash, Now in Flash — SearchMash, Google's experimental site launched last year to test new user interfaces for search results, has a Flash version (requires IE/Firefox and Flash 9). The site uses tabs to let you seamlessly switch between different search engines: web search …
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Rafat Ali / paidContent.org:
Time Warner Denies Parsons Exit is Next Week; Could Come Later — It can't be, at least not until Thursday or Friday: Parsons is in India next week for the Fortune Global conference, which is a big stage of TWX, not appropriate to announce his leaving/retirement at that stage, I would assume.
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Ernesto / TorrentFreak:
The Pirate Bay To Bring Back OiNK — BOiNK will be a little different from OiNK. For instance, the tracker will be public and it will start out with a lot less torrents than OiNK had when it was raided. The success of BOiNK will mainly depend on the former OiNK community, who will be asked to upload their old OiNK torrents.
Business Week:
A Cautionary Tale for Old Media — Early on, the Mercury News saw the Web threat coming. It's still struggling to survive — On Jan. 19, 1990, Robert D. Ingle, then executive editor of the San Jose Mercury News, wrote a remarkably prescient memo to his bosses at the newspaper chain Knight Ridder.
Larry Dignan / Between the Lines:
Office and Vista: Can't we give Microsoft some props? — Microsoft posts its best fiscal first quarter in years and Wall Street cheers. But the angst goes on. — Derrick Shields at SeekingAlpha asks how can Microsoft stay competitive. The common refrain: The days of Office and Vista are numbered.
Discussion:
Don Dodge on The Next …, Digital Daily, michael parekh on IT, Insider Chatter and Zoli's Blog
Ken Fisher / Ars Technica:
Accused speeder to cops: My GPS proves your radar gun is wrong — GPS-based tracking devices don't just help you figure out where you are and where you're going, they might also help you avoid a speeding ticket. Shaun Malone of California is contesting a speeding ticket in that state …
Robert Andrews / Wired News:
'Naughty' Facebook App Throws Real-World Parties — It turned the real-life sex-toy trade into a popular virtual diversion; now it's turning it back again. Naughty Gifts, one of the most used Facebook applications, is throwing a series of adult parties in the real world this week.
David Brooks / New York Times:
The Outsourced Brain — The gurus seek bliss amidst mountaintop solitude and serenity in the meditative trance, but I, grasshopper, have achieved the oneness with the universe that is known as pure externalization. — I have melded my mind with the heavens, communed with the universal consciousness …
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Gregg Keizer / Computerworld:
Microsoft now takes blame for WSUS update error — It changes story and apologizes, but angry admins say trust is broken — On the same day it tried to refute reports that enterprise customers' PCs were being force-fed the Windows XP desktop search tool, Microsoft Corp. did a turnabout and admitted it had messed up.
Daniel Schuhmann / Tom's Hardware Guide:
Windows Server 2008 Reviewed — Windows Server 2008 RC0 — Microsoft will release Windows 2008 Server as the direct successor to Windows 2003 Server in the spring of next year. The new server OS, code named Longhorn, shares the same kernel with Windows Vista and incorporates many additions compared to its predecessor.
Discussion:
Slashdot
InfoWorld:
Oracle calls BEA's price 'impossibly high' — Oracle has rejected BEA Systems' proposed purchase price of $21 per share, calling it "impossibly high" for Oracle or any other company to pay. — In a letter to BEA's board dated Oct. 25, Oracle again urged the company to accept its offer of $17 per share …
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