Top Items:
Jeff Jarvis / BuzzMachine:
Zuckerberg interview: What went wrong — I want to get video of the uncomfortable keynote with Mark Zuckerberg and Business Week's Sarah Lacy at SXSW today so I can use it as an object lesson in my journalism classes about how not do conduct an interview. My lecture:
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Daniel Terdiman / Geek Gestalt:
Journalist becomes the story at Mark Zuckerberg SXSWi keynote
Journalist becomes the story at Mark Zuckerberg SXSWi keynote
Discussion:
The Register, All Just Words, All Facebook, Mark Evans, Open Source, Guardian Unlimited, The Secret Diary of Steve Jobs, Tech Beat, Master of 500 Hats, Wired, White African, Bloggers Blog, deal architect, Somewhat Frank, mathewingram.com/work, PDA, FaceReviews, BuzzMachine, Laurel Papworth, scot hacker's foobar blog, CrunchGear, GigaOM, Smalltalk Tidbits …, Between the Lines, Valleywag and paidContent.org
Om Malik / GigaOM:
The GigaOM Interview: Ray Ozzie, Chief Software Architect, Microsoft Corp. — Fresh from his Mix'08 keynote, Microsoft's Chief Software Architect and industry luminary, Ray Ozzie, spent some time on the phone with me, discussing everything from the company's services strategy …
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John Oates / The Register:
Microsoft's Yahoo! takeover faces technical challenges
Microsoft's Yahoo! takeover faces technical challenges
Discussion:
Electronista
Allen Stern / CenterNetworks:
Zoho People Launches - HR Management — Zoho is launching a new application in their business suite of apps today called Zoho People. Zoho People is a HRM - Human Resources Management - app that includes five modules: organization, recruitment, forms, checklist, and self-service.
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Larry Dignan / Between the Lines:
Zoho steps up enterprise game; Launches Zoho People
Zoho steps up enterprise game; Launches Zoho People
Discussion:
Zoli's Blog
Zoli Erdos / Zoli's Blog:
Zoho Enters Human Resources Market with Zoho People.
Zoho Enters Human Resources Market with Zoho People.
Discussion:
SmoothSpan Blog
Louise Story / Bits:
How Do They Track You? Let Us Count the Ways — In my article in Monday's Times, “To Aim Ads, Web Is Keeping Closer Eye on What You Click,” I worked with comScore to develop a new measure for Web companies: how much data they can collect from users. — On the Internet …
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Louise Story / New York Times:
To Aim Ads, Web Is Keeping Closer Eye on You — A famous New Yorker cartoon from 1993 showed two dogs at a computer, with one saying to the other, “On the Internet, nobody knows you're a dog.” — That may no longer be true. — A new analysis of online consumer data shows that large Web companies …
Darren Murph / Engadget:
TSA can't believe MacBook Air is a real laptop, causes owner to miss flight — The TSA has been known to take issue with products designed in Cupertino before, but for one particular traveler, it was Apple's thinnest laptop ever that caused the latest holdup.
Associated Press:
Sprint phone first to use fast network — NEW YORK - Sprint Nextel Corp. is upgrading one of its cell phone models so that it can connect to a faster data network, doubling its download speeds and boosting upload speeds by about eight times. — Both Sprint and Verizon Wireless operate …
Discussion:
DSLreports, CrunchGear, The Boy Genius Report, jkOnTheRun, Phone Scoop, Engadget Mobile and Electronista
Ben Worthen / Business Technology:
Bigger Computer Monitors = More Productivity — Working late? Blame your computer screen. A new study finds that bigger monitors make people more productive. — Researchers at the University of Utah tested how quickly people performed tasks like editing a document …
Sridhar Pappu / New York Times:
No Game About Nazis for Nintendo — The Nintendo DS video game console has made itself indispensable to the playground set by serving up a steady menu of Super Mario games, plus the occasional SpongeBob SquarePants or Hannah Montana title. — Last month, when a 21-year-old British video …
Tim Arango / New York Times:
Cable Firms Join Forces to Attract Focused Ads — In an effort to slow Google's siphoning of advertising dollars away from television, the nation's six largest cable companies are making plans for a jointly owned company that would allow national advertisers to buy customized ads and interactive ads across the companies' systems.
Peter Judge / CNET News.com:
IBM denies re-entering PC market with Russian deal — IBM has said it is not getting back into the PC market, despite selling “Microsoft-free” PCs running Linux and OpenOffice in Eastern Europe. — “We're not getting back into the PC business,” said an IBM spokesman …
Eric A. Taub / New York Times:
Another DVD Format, but This One Says It's Cheaper — No sooner has the battle for the next-generation high definition DVD format ended, with Blu-ray triumphing over HD DVD, than a new contender has emerged. — A new system that is incompatible with Blu-ray, called HD VMD, for versatile multilayer disc, is trying to find a niche.
Brian Stelter / New York Times:
Serving Up Television Without the TV Set — The “stupid computer” is a repeated target of the dimwitted office manager Michael Scott on “The Office.” But the show itself may be motivating viewers to put down their remote controls and pick up their laptops.
Discussion:
broadstuff
InfoWorld:
Ericsson predicts demise of hotspots — As mobile broadband takes off, Wi-Fi hotspots will become as irrelevant as telephone booths, Ericsson Chief Marketing Officer Johan Bergendahl said Monday. — Mobile broadband is growing faster than mobile or fixed telephony ever did, Bergendahl said.
Discussion:
InformationWeek Weblog
Chris Albrecht / NewTeeVee:
Study: Kids Multitask While Watching TV — Kids are no longer glued to the TV. At least not according to a study released today by Grunwald Associates, which found that 64 percent of kids go online while watching television — and nearly half of them do so “frequently,” from three times a week to several times a day.