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11:30 AM ET, January 24, 2008

Techmeme

 Top Items: 
USA Today:
MacBook Air: The sexy kind of skinny but with some flaws  —  Apple has earned a sterling reputation designing beautiful products that usually perform as splendidly as they look.  —  The MacBook Air laptop that CEO Steve Jobs unveiled last week turns heads.
RELATED:
Steven Levy / Newsweek:
The Skinny on the MacBook Air  —  Size matters, but has Apple gone too far?  —  Early in my writing career, I had an assignment to follow around a mohel—the guy who does ritual circumcisions in the Jewish tradition.  My subject learned the trade by watching his dad, a renowned figure in the field.
IFPI:
IFPI publishes Digital Music Report 2008  —  ‘REVOLUTION, INNOVATION, RESPONSIBILITY’ … Governments are starting to accept that Internet Service Providers (ISPs) should take a far bigger role in protecting music on the internet, but urgent action is needed to translate this into reality …
RELATED:
Robert Andrews / paidContent.org:
Music Biz Pushes Piracy Blame To ISPs; Digital Sales Up 40 Percent  —  We said in December the music industry would this year start to shift blame for piracy on to ISPs.  As of today - and buoyed by recent similar French moves - the business is going after access providers in a big way.
Discussion: Reuters and DSLreports
Eric Savitz / Tech Trader Daily:
Sprint Cleans House: CFO, CMO, Sales Chief Get The Boot  —  Sprint Nextel (S) this morning started cleaning house: the company announced the departures effective tomorrow of CFO Paul Saleh, Chief Marketing Officer Tim Kelly, and President of Sales and Distribution Mark Angelino.  Buh-bye.  Buh-bye.
Discussion: CNET News.com and DSLreports
RELATED:
Business Wire:
Sprint Nextel Announces Key Leadership Changes
Discussion: mocoNews.net
Bill Snyder / InfoWorld:
Move over, Red Hat.  Open source ain't what it used to be  —  Has the open source software movement become a victim of its own success?  A provocative new study by a longtime software analyst suggests that the giants of the commercial software world are cashing in on the popularity …
Discussion: LinuxWorld.com and Open Source
RELATED:
Jeremy Kirk / LinuxWorld.com:
Schools will increase spending on open source
Discussion: LinuxInsider and Open Source
Robert A. Guth / Wall Street Journal:
Gates Calls for Kind Capitalism  —  Famously Competitive, Billionaire Now Urges Business to Aid the Poor  —  Free enterprise has been good to Bill Gates.  But later today, the Microsoft Corp. chairman will call for a revision of capitalism.  —  In a speech at the World Economic Forum in Davos …
Discussion: Slashdot
Larry Dignan / Between the Lines:
The AT&T leaves: Wireless strong; U-Verse buildout continues; Outlook in tact  —  AT&T reported its fourth quarter earnings and the big takeaways are that wireless growth is strong and enterprise spending is chugging along.  —  AT&T's earnings report garnered a little more attention …
RELATED:
Tony Smith / The Register:
Linux-less Eee PC launched in Japan  —  Asus has formally launched its bonsai laptop, the Eee PC, in Japan, pre-installing the machine with Windows XP Home Edition rather than Linux.  —  The machine's specifications proved to be those of the standard 4GB solid-state disc model - the Eee PC 701 …
Kevin Rose / Digg the Blog:
Digg: New Algorithm Changes  —  Just wanted to give everyone some insight into some of the changes we've been making this week.  As we've talked about in the past, Digg's promotional algorithm ensures that the most popular content dugg by a diverse, unique group of diggers reaches the home page.
RELATED:
Brian Stelter / New York Times:
Growing Online, BBC Is to Join With MySpace  —  The commercial arm of the British Broadcasting Corporation is expected to announce a partnership with MySpace on Thursday to make some of its content available on MySpace, the popular social networking Web site.
RELATED:
Rory Cellan-Jones / BBC NEWS | dot.life:
MySpace and BBC - friend or foe?
Discussion: The Register, NewTeeVee and paidContent
Thomas Ricker / Engadget:
Microsoft: Vista has fewer first-year vulnerabilities than any modern OS  —  He we go again.  Like an evil pope preparing to recapture the Holy Land, Jeff Jones, Microsoft's self-proclaimed “Security Guy” (and Microsoft Director) just published the Vista One Year Vulnerability Report.
Discussion: Bink.nu
RELATED:
Fred / A VC:
Rethinking The Local Paper  —  This is my local newspaper, called The Villager.  If you live in Greenwich Village, NYC, you probably read The Villager.  But there are several problems with The Villager (which was voted NY State's “Best Community Newspaper").  —  First, it's only updated once a week.
Google Blogoscoped:
Google Health Login Page  —  Want to get a first live glimpse of Google Health, which Google's Marissa Mayer announced will be rolled out in early 2008?  Point your browser to:  —  www.google.com/accounts/ServiceLogin?se rvice= health  —  However, I didn't get past the login screen, so all we see at the moment is the intro page.
Michael Masnick / Techdirt:
Free Music Does Not Conflict With The Free Market  —  An associate editor at PC Mag emailed in a link to an opinion piece by PC Mag Editor-in-Chief Lance Ulanoff complaining that the ongoing demise of DRM is actually bad for the music industry — and even claiming that it goes against basic economic principles.
Discussion: PC Magazine
Arn / MacRumors:
Netflix to Offer Mac Video Streaming in 2008  —  AlleyInsider reports that during their Q4 financial results, Netflix confirmed that they were hoping to have a Mac web-streaming video solution available in 2008.  An earlier Netflix blog entry from August had reported the same expectation.
Discussion: Between the Lines
 
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 More Items: 
Alex Iskold / ReadWriteWeb:
The “Work From Home” Generation
Jeremiah Owyang / Web Strategy:
What Growth in Widget networks means to the Web Strategist
DigiTimes:
DDR3 price premium over DDR2 to shrink to 10% in 2H
Discussion: The Tech Report
Kit Eaton / Gizmodo:
Samsung Thinks They “Know What Women Want,” Releases Two Fashion Phones
Discussion: textually.org
Reuters:
Google ties up with Japan's DoCoMo
Thomas Ricker / Engadget:
Apple halving iPhone projections for quarter?
Discussion: Insanely Great Mac
Philipp Lenssen / Google Blogoscoped:
MapReduce Explained  —  Mark Chu-Carroll is a Google software engineer …
Haroon Malik / Gizmodo:
Internal AT&T Memo Details Contract Free Rate Plans, Handset Must …
Discussion: Insanely Great Mac
 Earlier Items: 
Royal Pingdom:
When data center cabling becomes art
Ben Worthen / Business Technology:
Stories to Terrify the Average Computer Owner
Discussion: Computerworld and VoIP Blog
The Ask.com Blog:
Give Me Some Skin: Ask Gets More Personal
Sinead Carew / Reuters:
YouTube to feature on wider range of mobile phones
Michael Arrington / TechCrunch:
Bono Responds To The Davos Question
Discussion: Scobleizer and Beet.TV
Seth Finkelstein / Guardian:
You say you've never considered the politics of search engines?
Gregg Keizer / Computerworld:
Best Buy sold infected digital picture frames
Electronista:
Canon unveils 12-megapixel EOS Rebel XSi
Discussion: Engadget, Gearlog and Gizmodo
 

 
From Mediagazer:

Etan Vlessing / The Hollywood Reporter:
Comcast reports Peacock losses fell to $215M in Q1 from $639M in Q1 2024, revenue rose 16% YoY to $1.2B, and paying subscribers hit 41M, up from 36M in Q4 2024

Charlotte Tobitt / Press Gazette:
Tortoise plans to launch Observer.co.uk on April 25 and publish eight to 12 stories per day; Tortoise co-CEO Richard Furness says “we can buck the market trend”

Michael Savage / The Guardian:
The BBC launches BBC News Burmese in Myanmar on a satellite video channel formerly used by VOA, citing an “audience in need” in the aftermath of the earthquake

 
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