Top Items:
Jonathan Schwartz / Jonathan Schwartz's Blog:
Helping Dolphins Fly — We announced big news today - our preliminary results for our fiscal second quarter, and as importantly, that we're acquiring MySQL AB. — If you're interested in the financial details for the quarter, tune in to our conference call (see details on sun.com) today …
RELATED:
Sun Microsystems:
Sun Microsystems Announces Agreement to Acquire MySQL, Developer of the World's Most Popular Open Source Database — Sun Growth Strategy Accelerates With New Position in $15 Billion Database Market — Sun Microsystems, Inc. (NASDAQ: JAVA) today announced it has entered into a definitive agreement …
Discussion:
ReadWriteWeb, TechCrunch, The Open Road, The Register, CyberNet, Digital Trends, The Enterprise System …, rc3.org, Valleywag and ongoing
Tim O'Reilly / O'Reilly Radar:
Sun To Acquire MySQL — Sun Microsystems announced this morning that it has agreed to acquire open source database leader MySQL AB for $1 billion in cash and assumed stock options. (Disclosure: I am on the board of directors of MySQL, and O'Reilly co-produces the MySQL User Conference with MySQL.
Zack Urlocker / InfoWorld:
Sun Shines on LAMP — This morning we announced that Sun Microsystems has signed a definitive agreement to acquire MySQL. Having spent the last four plus years working on making MySQL into a strong independent company, this is a bit of a change of strategy, but from my perspective it's all for the good.
Discussion:
eWeek, Open Source, Kaj Arnö, Forbes, CNET News.com, Electronista, TheOpenForce.com, PC World, Tech Trader Daily and 451 CAOS Theory
Larry Dignan / Between the Lines:
Sun acquires MySQL; Adds to its software stack — Updated: Sun Microsystems is taking the plunge into the database market with the purchase of open source database developer MySQL for $1 billion ($800 million in cash in exchange for all MySQL stock and assumption of approximately $200 million in options).
Martin LaMonica / CNET News.com:
Sun to fork out $1 billion for open-source firm MySQL — Sun Microsystems will plunk down $1 billion to buy MySQL, the maker of a popular open-source database. — Sun said Wednesday that it will pay about $800 million in cash for MySQL's stock and take on about $200 million worth of options.
BBC:
Facebook asked to pull Scrabulous — Facebook has been asked to remove the Scrabulous game from its website by the makers of Scrabble. — The Facebook add-on has proved hugely popular on the social network site and regularly racks up more than 500,000 daily users.
Discussion:
PDA, Profy.Com, Hitwise Intelligence, p2pnet, Innovation in Software, All Facebook, Mashable!, michael parekh on IT and broadstuff
RELATED:
Rory Cellan-Jones / BBC NEWS | dot.life:
Facebook, Scrabulous, and the End of Innocence
Facebook, Scrabulous, and the End of Innocence
Discussion:
The Register
Robert Scoble / Scobleizer:
Why we're going to FastCompany.tv — Ahh, Andy Plesser broke my career news again (he was the guy who broke my news about leaving Microsoft too). Louis Gray got the story first, though, I think, although I told dozens of people at the BlogHaus last week at CES.
RELATED:
Andy Plesser / Beet.TV:
Robert Scoble to Launch Online Video Network At Fast Company
Robert Scoble to Launch Online Video Network At Fast Company
Discussion:
Fast Company Now, Podcasting News, Andy Beal's Marketing Pilgrim, CenterNetworks, TechCrunch, Mashable!, Dembot and louisgray.com
Larry Dignan / Between the Lines:
Surprise! Oracle buys BEA Systems — The clumsy courtship between Oracle and BEA Systems is over. Oracle said Wednesday that it will acquire BEA for $19.375 a share in cash. — The offer puts the value of BEA at roughly $8.5 billion. — On a conference call-where Oracle …
Discussion:
WebProNews, Tech Confidential, The Register, GigaOM, Tech Trader Daily, eWeek, HipMojo.com and Portfolio.com
RELATED:
John Markoff / Bits:
The Passion of Steve Jobs — Even more than when he's performing on stage, Steven P. Jobs's passion for personal computing comes through when he talks about the years he spent cajoling his designers to build what he presented today as the world's “thinnest” computer.
RELATED:
Dean Takahashi / Tech Talk with Dean Takahashi:
Macworld: the thinnest notebook computer and Blu-ray
Macworld: the thinnest notebook computer and Blu-ray
Devin Coldewey / CrunchGear:
MacBook AirHead: why Apple's new laptop is basically useless
MacBook AirHead: why Apple's new laptop is basically useless
Discussion:
CNET News.com, Infinite Loop, Virtual Economics, Web Worker Daily, GottaBeMobile, Engadget, WinExtra, Shipping Seven, Christopher Null, Elliott C. Back, Jeremy Toeman's LIVEdigitally, Alec Saunders .LOG, Venture Chronicles, PaulStamatiou.com, mikecane2008.wordpress.com, TechFold and Brier Dudley's blog
Microsoft:
Microsoft Security Advisory (947563) — Vulnerability in Microsoft Excel Could Allow Remote Code Execution — Microsoft is investigating new public reports of a vulnerability in Microsoft Office Excel 2003 Service Pack 2, Microsoft Office Excel Viewer 2003, Microsoft Office Excel 2002 …
Discussion:
eWeek, Webware.com, IDG News Service, The Microsoft Security …, InformationWeek Weblog, Security Fix, Computerworld and securosis.com
Tony Ruscoe / Google Blogoscoped:
iGoogle Themes Directory Launched — In October last year, I asked whether we should expect to see an iGoogle Themes Directory Coming Soon. Today, Peter Dawson noticed that the Themes Directory is now live! — Not only does the directory allow you to view and select themes …
RELATED:
Sony Ericsson:
Sony Ericsson sells over 100 million handsets in 2007 — 2007 Highlights: — 145 million music enabled phones sold to date, of which 57 million were Walkman® phones - maintaining leadership in music — The consolidated financial summary for Sony Ericsson Mobile Communications AB …
Michael Arrington / TechCrunch:
Stevenote In 60 Seconds — Too lazy to watch the entire Stevenote video stream on CrunchGear, or read Duncan's real time notes from the event? No worries. Mahalo's Veronica Belmont distills all the important stuff down into just sixty seconds. — See all of our coverage from Macworld here and at CrunchGear.
Ryan Block / Engadget:
iTunes and Apple TV rentals and purchases: what you can (and can't) do — Oh dear lord is there a lot of confusion about iTunes movie rentals, and how they differ from movie and TV purchases — and how the Apple TV and iTunes computer-driven downloads aren't the same either.
Eric J. Sinrod / CNET News.com:
Is GPS liability next? — perspective An automobile driver recently was held responsible for crashing a rental car into a train after following global positioning system instructions that put his rental car onto the train tracks. — This raises the specter of automobile drivers pointing …
Discussion:
All Points Blog