Top Items:
Toshiba:
Toshiba Announces Discontinuation of HD DVD Businesses — Company Remains Focused on Championing Consumer Access to High Definition Content — TOKYO—Toshiba Corporation today announced that it has undertaken a thorough review of its overall strategy for HD DVD and has decided it will no longer develop …
Discussion:
CrunchGear, Engadget, Associated Press, CNET News.com, Today @ PC World, Gizmodo, Salon, VentureBeat, Crave, Christopher Null, BBC, Venture Chronicles, InformationWeek Weblog, Engadget HD, Wall Street Journal, Good Morning Silicon Valley, Reuters, Between the Lines, Ed Burnette's Dev Connection, CyberNet, greg hughes, Hardware 2.0, Alice Hill's Real Tech News, All News Feeds, Searchviews, Switched, The Tech Report, paidContent.org, eWeek and DailyTech
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Ryan Block / Engadget:
Top ten things to do with your now-defunct HD DVD player — Finally, HD DVD users now have the empirical evidence they've been looking for to prove that the universe really is conspiring against them. We figured we'd make ourselves useful over here and give you a list of things you can do with your poor …
Chris Tribbey / HomeMediaMagazine.com:
The War Is Over! — The high-definition format war is officially over.
The War Is Over! — The high-definition format war is officially over.
DealBook:
Microsoft to Authorize Proxy Fight at Yahoo — In an escalation of its fight for Yahoo, Microsoft will authorize a proxy fight at the Internet company this week, people briefed on the matter told DealBook. — The move, expected to cost about $20 million to $30 million …
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USA Today:
Verizon to offer flat-fee unlimited wireless plans — NEW YORK — Verizon Wireless (VZ) Tuesday will unveil a plan that offers unlimited domestic calling for a flat fee of $99.99 to $139.99 a month. — Unlimited plans for BlackBerry devices and other smartphones will start at $129.99 a month.
Discussion:
Associated Press, Valleywag, Alec Saunders .LOG, RyanSpoon.com, mocoNews.net, TechBlog, The Mobile Technology Weblog and IP Democracy
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Michael Arrington / TechCrunch:
CNET Changes Quarterbacks: Dan Farber Takes Over As Editor In Chief — Big news at CNET today - editor in chief Jai Singh is out, and Dan Farber, most recently the editor in chief of CNET-owned ZDNet, is taking over. In his new role, Dan will oversee the editorial content and user experience for CNET News.
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Dan Farber / Between the Lines:
Transition time at ZDNet — This will be my last post on Between the Lines and ZDNet for a while. I am moving over to head up our sister CNET Networks site News.com starting today. My talented, experienced, incisive and prolific BTL partner Larry Dignan will become Editor in Chief …
Christine Monaghan / Apple:
iPod shuffle Now Just $49 — New 2GB Model Priced at $69 — Apple® today announced that its iPod® shuffle, the world's most wearable music player, is now even more affordably priced at $49 and that it is introducing a new 2GB model of the iPod shuffle for $69.
Discussion:
MacUser, Engadget, AppleInsider, Business and financial news, Tech Trader Daily, TidBITS, anythingbutipod>>, Podcasting News and Gearlog
Richard MacManus / ReadWriteWeb:
Digg Gets More Mainstream; But Are Their News Sources Too Narrow Now? — Allen Stern over at CenterNetworks did an analysis of current frontpage stories on digg, the popular social news site that started out as a tech competitor to Slashdot. Allen noted that now just 15% of frontpage stories …
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Om Malik / GigaOM:
Scribd's iPaper Plan — Scribd, the San Francisco-based startup that was dubbed the “YouTube of Documents,” has finally become worthy of that sobriquet. While I don't care much about community around documents, I love the concept of the dead simple sharing of documents.
Tablet-Guru.com:
WiMax N810 Leaked, To Be Announced At CTIA? — An eagle-eyed member of InternetTabletTalk.com noticed this interesting image of the Nokia N810 Internet Tablet in the February edition of the Best Buy Mobile buyer's guide. Showing the tablet off on page 23 in a very sexy black outfit …
Katie Marsal / AppleInsider:
Apple taps Linkin Park to perform at “secret” NYC event — Apple has enlisted the services of popular alternative rock band Linkin Park to perform at an unannounced company event due to take place in New York City, AppleInsider has been informed. — Mike Shinoda, front-man …
Joel Spolsky / Joel on Software:
Why are the Microsoft Office file formats so complicated? (And some workarounds) — Last week, Microsoft published the binary file formats for Office. These formats appear to be almost completely insane. The Excel 97-2003 file format is a 349 page PDF file. But wait, that's not all there is to it!
Thomas Ricker / Engadget:
HP's UMPC 2133 revealed — We've just received these images of HP's rumored UMPC. Honestly, we have no reason to doubt their authenticity. The HP Compaq 2133 “lifestyle accessory” features a big, scratch resistant 8.9-inch 1366 x 766 (WXGA) display, ExpressCard/54 slot, Wireless LAN …
PR Newswire:
Limelight Networks Reports Fourth-Quarter and Full Year 2007 Results — Limelight Networks, Inc. (Nasdaq: LLNW - News) today reported fourth quarter and full year results for the period ended December 31, 2007. — “2007 was a year of strong growth for Limelight Networks.
Kristin Kalning / MSNBC:
Will Microsoft partner with Netflix? — Rumors have swirled since Netflix's CEO joined Microsoft's board last year — SAN FRANCISCO - Will Microsoft offer Netflix movies over Xbox Live? — Bloggers and reporters have been buzzing about the possibility of a partnership for almost a year …
david ascher:
Mozilla Messaging — Today we've announced the launch of Mozilla Messaging, the new name for the entity I've been calling MailCo on this blog. As promised, it's a new subsidiary of the Mozilla Foundation, focused on email and internet communications. We've put up the essential information …
Discussion:
DailyTech, The Open Road, Between the Lines, Open Source, Mozilla Messaging, CenterNetworks, Web Worker Daily, Compiler, Mozilla, CNET News.com, CyberNet and TechSpot News
Alertbox:
Top-10 Application-Design Mistakes … It's hard to write a general article about application design mistakes because the very worst mistakes are domain-specific and idiosyncratic. Usually, applications fail because they (a) solve the wrong problem, (b) have the wrong features for the right problem …
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Google Blogoscoped