Top Items:
Microsoft:
Microsoft Makes Strategic Changes in Technology and Business Practices to Expand Interoperability — New interoperability principles and actions will increase openness of key products. — Microsoft Corp. today announced a set of broad-reaching changes to its technology and business practices …
Discussion:
eWeek, ReadWriteWeb, GigaOM, ConsortiumInfo.org …, CenterNetworks, Digital Daily, The Open Road, Profy.Com, Engadget, John Carroll, CyberNet, Dana Gardner's BriefingsDirect, Guardian Unlimited, SmoothSpan Blog, Digital Trends, 451 CAOS Theory, Digital Inspiration, Mashable! and Apple Gazette
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Mary Jo Foley / All about Microsoft:
Microsoft pledges (yet again) that it wants to be interoperable — Microsoft's “significant” announcement on February 21 turns out to be not so significant at all. Microsoft is promising — for the umpteenth time — that it will share all the protocols and programming interfaces needed …
Todd Bishop / Todd Bishop's Microsoft Blog:
Microsoft tries to appease EU by sharing secrets — Microsoft, reacting to the rejection of its antitrust appeal in Europe last year, said this morning that it's giving outside software developers new levels of access to its biggest programs. Among other things, the company …
InfoWorld:
Microsoft makes boldest move yet embracing open source — In a major turnaround for Microsoft, the company Thursday promised “greater transparency” in its development and business practices, outlining a new strategy to provide more access to APIs and previously proprietary protocols …
Eric Savitz / Tech Trader Daily:
Microsoft Announces Plans To Improve Interoperability
Microsoft Announces Plans To Improve Interoperability
Discussion:
Brier Dudley's blog, eWeek, Gizmodo, InfoWorld, Silicon Alley Insider and Business and financial news
Matt Asay / The Open Road:
Let's be clear: Microsoft's pledge is not a blanket covenant not to sue [UPDATE]
Let's be clear: Microsoft's pledge is not a blanket covenant not to sue [UPDATE]
Eric Bangeman / Ars Technica:
Microsoft launches new open standards, interoperability push
Microsoft launches new open standards, interoperability push
Discussion:
eWeek
Inside AdSense:
Fueling creativity in online video - with AdSense for video beta — We know that publishers are quickly adding video to their sites and looking for ways to earn additional revenue. If this sounds like you, look no further than AdSense for video, our solution for qualifying publishers.
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Billboard:
Linkin Park Rocks Apple Store At Secret Show — Linkin Park rocked a crowd of contest winners and industry personnel just after midnight Thursday (Feb. 21) at the Apple Store in New York's Soho neighborhood, in what served as an intimate warm-up for a show tonight at the city's Madison Square Garden.
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Stephanie Rosenbloom / New York Times:
Sorry, Boys, This Is Our Domain — THE prototypical computer whiz of popular imagination — pasty, geeky, male — has failed to live up to his reputation. — Research shows that among the youngest Internet users, the primary creators of Web content (blogs, graphics, photographs, Web sites) …
Associated Press:
Google ventures into health records biz — SAN FRANCISCO, California (AP) — Google Inc. will begin storing the medical records of a few thousand people as it tests a long-awaited health service that's likely to raise more concerns about the volume of sensitive information entrusted to the Internet search leader.
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Steve Lohr / Bits:
Google Health Begins Its Preseason at Cleveland Clinic — For 18 months, Google has been working to come up with a product offering and a strategy in the promising field of consumer health information. Until now, the search giant hasn't had anything to show for its labors other than bumps along the way …
Dare Obasanjo aka Carnage4Life:
Facebook Moves to Curtail Application Spam: What Took So Long? — One of the biggest problems with the Facebook user experience today is the amount of spam from applications that are trying to leverage its social networks to “grow virally”. For this reason, it is unsurprising to read …
Discussion:
One By One Media
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Paul C. Jeffries / Facebook Blog:
Application Spam — Recently, a lot of people have been frustrated …
Application Spam — Recently, a lot of people have been frustrated …
Walter S. Mossberg / Personal Technology:
Price May Be Steep, But Thin ThinkPad Has Abundant Features — I am writing these words on a new laptop computer that packs a full-size screen and keyboard into a body that's quite thin and light. And it has a solid-state drive with no moving parts instead of a hard disk.
Discussion:
CrunchGear, GottaBeMobile, The Tech Report, jkOnTheRun, Engadget, Gizmodo, I4U News and Technology Questions
Barry Schwartz / Search Engine Land:
Ask.com Binoculars Adds Compete.com Stats — Ask.com has announced that they have added site statistics from Compete.com to the binoculars feature in the search results. Now, instead of just getting a site preview, you also get estimated visitor stats, site rank, a line chart to plot …
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IDG News Service:
Flash Memory Prices to Plummet, Analysts Say — The weak U.S. economy, plus falling demand and a flooded market, should push NAND flash prices down this year. — Recommend this story? — Prices of NAND flash memory could plummet this year because of weak demand and an oversupply …
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Suzanne Tindal / CNET News.com:
Microsoft: Vista SP1 will break these programs — Microsoft has published a list of programs that will not work or that will suffer from reduced functionality after the installation of Vista Service Pack 1. — The list of programs consists mostly of security applications, such as Trend Micro Internet Security 2008.
Mark Sweney / Guardian:
Facebook sees first dip in UK users — Facebook has suffered its first fall in UK users, with a 5% drop between December and January, according to new figures. — However, Facebook still had 8.5 million unique users in January and remains the most popular social networking website in the UK …
Discussion:
CNET News.com, All Facebook, Silicon Alley Insider, TechCrunch UK, Mashable! and The Last Podcast
Stephen Shankland / CNET News.com:
Stanford camera chip can see in 3D — Most folks think of a photo as a two-dimensional representation of a scene. Stanford University researchers, however, have created an image sensor that also can judge the distance of subjects within a snapshot. — To accomplish the feat …