Top Items:
Anne Broache / CNET News.com:
Google outlines proposal for ‘Wi-Fi on steroids’ — Google on Monday said it has a plan to have American consumers from Manhattan to rural North Dakota surfing the Web on handheld gadgets at gigabits-per-second speeds by the 2009 holiday season. — The company, joined by other heavyweights …
Discussion:
One More Thing, Lost Remote, Bits, IP Democracy, Los Angeles Times, Reuters, Learn. Rank. Dominate., WebProNews, Tech Beat, mocoNews.net, Google Watch, DSLreports, TECH.BLORGE.com, Silicon Alley Insider, dailywireless.org, Between the Lines, WebGuild, Gearlog, Valleywag, Techland, Electronista and Mashable!
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Eric Bangeman / Ars Technica:
After 700MHz coup, Google now fronting white space devices
After 700MHz coup, Google now fronting white space devices
Discussion:
Telecompetitor, Susan Crawford blog, Gizmodo, ZDNet Government and Good Morning Silicon Valley
Bret Taylor / FriendFeed Blog:
Post your FriendFeed comments back to Twitter — For you Twitter users: When you are commenting on a Twitter post in FriendFeed, you now have the option of sending your comment as an @reply in Twitter as well: — Happy Tweeting! — Ana said...
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Steven Hodson / WinExtra:
FriendFeed changed the conversation landscape today
FriendFeed changed the conversation landscape today
Discussion:
The Last Podcast, mathewingram.com/work, FriendFeed Blog, odd time signatures and Ben.geek.nz
Ed Bott / Ed Bott's Microsoft Report:
What Microsoft can teach Apple about software updates — Last summer, I looked at Apple's announced plans for its Safari web browser and wondered out loud, Is Steve Jobs planning a hostile takeover of the Windows desktop? Apple's decision last week to begin aggressively pushing Safari …
Michael Arrington / TechCrunch:
Facebook To Launch Preferred Application Program — The Facebook Platform, launched in May 2007, has been an unqualified success. Nearly 20,000 applications have been released by third party developers, and it spurred Google to quickly launch a competing platform of its own.
Discussion:
Online Media Cultist
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Marshall Kirkpatrick / ReadWriteWeb:
Facebook Security Lapse Leaves Private Photos Exposed, Even Paris and Zuck's — The Associated Press reported this afternoon that its reporters were able to use an undisclosed method to access private photos on Facebook, including some from Paris Hilton at the Emmys and others …
US Department of Justice:
Statement of the Department of Justice Antitrust Division on its Decision to Close its Investigation of XM Satellite Radio Holdings Inc.'s Merger with Sirius Satellite Radio Inc. — Evidence Does Not Establish that Combination of Satellite Radio Providers Would Substantially Reduce Competition
Discussion:
Digital Daily, paidContent.org, Bit Player, The Register, GeekBrief.TV, Tech Trader Daily, DailyTech, Ars Technica, Engadget, Wall Street Journal, Gearlog, TECH.BLORGE.com, BloggingStocks, Silicon Alley Insider, Gizmodo, Policy Blog, VentureBeat, Tech Ticker, Zatz Not Funny!, Electronista, Switched, mocoNews.net, CNET News.com, DSLreports, SEO and Tech Daily and Digg
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Caroline McCarthy / The Social:
With Winamp in mind, Imeem announces developer strategy — Social media service Imeem has announced the Imeem Media Platform, a set of APIs (application programming interfaces) and tools so that outside developers and partners can contribute to the site. The APIs will give developers access …
Adam Lusher / Sydney Morning Herald:
Google's free beer and ‘big-ass’ barbies — IT STARTED with two students in a garage and became a $A220 billion giant relied upon by 60% of the world's internet users. — Now, one of the men at the heart of the Google empire has disclosed the secrets behind its rise from almost nothing 10 years ago …
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Chris Albrecht / NewTeeVee:
Come on Down to South Park and Watch the Shows Online — The web just got a whole lot funnier as the guys behind South Park have made every episode of their hit show available for free online. That's right — every. episode. (Take that Hulu, and your five weeks' worth of shows window).
Discussion:
Webware.com, last100, Gizmodo, TECH.BLORGE.com, The Globe and Mail, Boing Boing, Maura Welch's blog, Web Scout, The Daily Dish, Reel Pop, Ryan Stewart and Mashable!
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Eric Alterman / New Yorker:
OUT OF PRINT — The death and life of the American newspaper. … The American newspaper has been around for approximately three hundred years. Benjamin Harris's spirited Publick Occurrences, Both Forreign and Domestick managed just one issue, in 1690, before the Massachusetts authorities closed it down.
Discussion:
Lost Remote, paidContent.org, Mashable!, Gawker, Blogcosm, The Real McCrea and Romenesko
Tom Evslin / Fractals of Change:
Amazon S3 - Backstory for Nerds - Part 2 — Note to non-nerds - back to English tomorrow; you may want to skip this one. — Here's the problem: My broadbandwiki browser application does two things for users: it shows them what broadband access people around them are using and it enables …
Ionut Alex Chitu / Google Operating System:
Expandable Google Search Box — If you entered long queries in a Google search box, you would notice that it's difficult to edit them because Google optimized the size of the box for short queries. Things have changed and now you can much bigger queries and Google will adjust the search box's size after you perform a search.
Discussion:
Google Blogoscoped
Bryan Gardiner / Epicenter:
Australian Company Calls WiMax a Disaster — Disaster. Miserable failure. Mired in opportunistic hype. Those were just a few of the descriptors Garth Freeman, the CEO of Australian company Buzz Broadband, recently used to characterize the next-generation wireless technology, WiMax.
Liz Gannes / NewTeeVee:
Starz to Sell on iTunes — Starz will launch on iTunes tonight, said Marc DeBevoise, SVP of business development and strategy for the production company, speaking at a panel at the Future of Television West conference in Hollywood. — DeBevoise said that consumers have demonstrated …
Nathan McFeters / Zero Day:
Defeating the Same Origin Policy part 2 — In my first post in this series, I discussed the Same Origin Policy and how it protects us from some very serious attacks, the dangers of domain name based trust, and how to attack implementations of the Same Origin Policy within the Java Virtual Machine (JVM).
Rafe Needleman / Webware.com:
Peerflix is shutting down — The DVD swapping service Peerflix is closing, according to an e-mail sent to users this evening. The service enabled its members to request DVDs from other members. It let users print prepaid fold-it-yourself mailing containers on 8x11-inch paper, and charged a fee for each swap.