Top Items:
Wall Street Journal:
Microsoft's Next Move on Yahoo Is Imminent — One Possibility — Is a Proxy Slate — To Replace Board — Microsoft Corp. is expected to make its next move in the three-month-old takeover standoff with Yahoo Inc. as early as Wednesday, as the two sides have failed to reach any negotiated acquisition deal.
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PDA, BoomTown, Epicenter, Mashable!, MediaFile, TechCrunch, CNBC.com, Valleywag, Between the Lines, Digital Daily, Tech Ticker and Silicon Alley Insider
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Yi-Wyn Yen / Fortune:
Yahoo maintains silence — Three days after Microsoft's drop-dead deal deadline, the standoff continues. — (Fortune) — No news isn't always good news. Four days have passed since the expiration of Microsoft's deadline for Yahoo to accept its buyout offer or face a hostile takeover.
Dawn Kawamoto / CNET News.com:
Report: Microsoft earmarks $1.5 billion to keep Yahoo employees
Report: Microsoft earmarks $1.5 billion to keep Yahoo employees
Discussion:
Todd Bishop's Microsoft Blog
Caroline McCarthy / The Social:
Artsy side of search: Designers, pop stars create iGoogle themes — This is Google's video introducing its work with artists worldwide to create — beautiful, funky, and visually enticing iGoogle pages for the masses. — (Credit: Google) — If you thought Google's capacity for high design …
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Official Google Blog:
Where art thou? — Did you notice the chrome tulips on Google's homepage today? They are part of a special Google doodle done by renowned artist Jeff Koons. And that isn't the only art appearing anew on Google today. As part of our iGoogle Artists project, we have collaborated …
Darren Waters / BBC:
Web in infancy, says Berners-Lee — The world wide web is “still in its infancy”, the web's inventor Sir Tim Berners-Lee has told BBC News. — He was speaking ahead of the 15th anniversary of the day the web's code was put into the public domain by Cern, the lab where the web was developed.
Discussion:
TECH.BLORGE.com, BBC NEWS, Guardian Unlimited, p2pnet, JasonKolb.com, Snipperoo, I4U News, WebGuild, broadstuff, WebProNews, The Real McCrea, the billblog, Slashdot, Howard Lindzon and Digg
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Professor Nigel Shadbolt / BBC:
Future web — Exactly 15 years ago the directors at the lab where the web was first developed signed a document which said the technology could be used by anyone free of charge. — That decision was instrumental in making the web truly world wide. BBC News talks to some of the leading figures …
Margaret Kane / CNET News.com:
Time Warner to split off cable service — Time Warner is splitting off its cable services division, the company said Wednesday. — Time Warner currently owns around 84 percent of Time Warner Cable. The media giant, which has been struggling of late, has been rumored to be discussing an AOL partnership with Yahoo.
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Techland, The Register, Tech Trader Daily, Digital Daily, paidContent.org and DSLreports
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Nwahs / TmoNews:
More 3G release news — Here is the update we promised earlier. It is pretty hard posting from a non-smartphone, and cropping sensitive information out of pictures, so we do apologize for the delay. This is the moment we have all been waiting for. 3G countdown anyone? The list of cities, in order, is as follows:
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Elinor Mills / CNET News.com:
Google diving into 3D mapping of oceans — We've got Google Earth and Google Sky. Next up will be a map of the world below sea level—Google Ocean. — The company has assembled an advisory group of oceanography experts, and in December invited researchers from institutions around the world to the Mountain View, Calif., Googleplex.
Discussion:
Epicenter, Search Engine Land, Mashable!, Compiler, Virtual Worlds News and dailywireless.org
Business Wire:
Time Warner Inc. Reports First-Quarter 2008 Results — NEW YORK—(BUSINESS WIRE)—Time Warner Inc. (NYSE:TWX - News) today reported financial results for its first quarter ended March 31, 2008. — Chief Executive Officer Jeff Bewkes said: “Our results this quarter, particularly …
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TechCrunch, Tech Trader Daily, Between the Lines, Silicon Alley Insider, IP Democracy and Mashable!
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Peter Kafka / Silicon Alley Insider:
Eric Schmidt: Google Has Secret Plan To Mint Money With YouTube (GOOG) — CNBC is hyping a Eric Schmidt/Maria Bartiromo interview that airs today at 4pm, but they're already released the transcript from the chat, taped yesterday. — Predictably, there are no shockers …
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Chanpory Rith / LifeClever:
The Missing iPhone Ringtone — I love the ringtone at the end of every iPhone television ad. It's simple, sweet, and unassuming. But strangely, it's doesn't come installed on the iPhone. You can't even buy it from the iTunes Music Store. Fortunately, you can download it here for free:
Bill Ray / The Register:
Sony Ericsson puts a Flash into Java — Why have only one development platform? — Sony Ericsson is planning to offer developers the opportunity to embed Flash Lite applications inside J2ME midlets, in the hope that two mobile phone application platforms will prove better than one.
Discussion:
The Boy Genius Report
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Frank Caron / Opposable Thumbs:
Crytek swears off PC-exclusive games due to piracy — It has long been a running joke around the office that you guys hate us because we haven't reviewed Crysis yet. The fact of the matter is that we're just too busy playing with the barrel physics demo. Alas, those hoping for another well-tuned …
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Igor Gajic / pcplay.hr:
PC PLAY - Magazine For The Next Level Generation
PC PLAY - Magazine For The Next Level Generation
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The Tech Report, Kotaku, Joystiq, Xbox 360 Fanboy, Game|Life, GamesIndustry.biz and Blue's News
Timothy B. Lee / Ars Technica:
An elephant never forgets? George W. Bush's lost e-mails — The case of the missing e-mail — A federal magistrate judge on Thursday chastised the Bush administration for failing to fully answer questions related to a long-running dispute over missing White House emails.
Julian Sanchez / Ars Technica:
Is Lessig's Free Culture just a modern Das Kopyright? — April appears to be shaping up as National Slag Lawrence Lessig Month. Last week, there was RedState's ill-starred effort to turn the Stanford legal scholar (and Barack Obama supporter) into the next Jeremiah Wright.
Michael Arrington / TechCrunch:
It's easier to invent the future than to predict it. — The title of this post, a (mis)quote from computer scientist Alan Kay, is the last line in a job listing posted by Jeff Bezos in 1994 to the Usenet group mi.jobs. The title of the job listing was “Well-capitalized Seattle start-up seeks Unix developers.”
Discussion:
HipMojo.com