Top Items:
Wall Street Journal:
Ballmer Says Microsoft Can Build Ad Business Without Buying Yahoo — Microsoft Corp. Chief Executive Steve Ballmer said he is confident that his company can build a competitive online-advertising business without buying Yahoo Inc., but that it “could just take more time.”
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Brian Caulfield / Forbes:
Found: Yang's Lost Microsoft Money — Note to Yahoo! Chief Executive Jerry Yang. — Word is that you are trying to wring a few more bucks out of Microsoft (nasdaq: MSFT - news - people ) for your struggling Web portal. — Maybe this will help: The state of California says you have $3,008.46 worth …
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Silicon Alley Insider
Stephen Shankland / CNET News.com:
Report: Yahoo getting serious about Google ad deal
Report: Yahoo getting serious about Google ad deal
Discussion:
Search Engine Journal, WebProNews, Between the Lines, paidContent.org, Silicon Alley Insider, Valleywag and TG Daily
Darryl K. Taft / eWeek:
Ruby, Rails Give Twitter Its Tweet — Twitter's reliance on Ruby and Ruby on Rails proves the language's resilience. — As the maker of one of the largest applications using Ruby on Rails on the Web, Twitter knows a thing or two about scaling applications built with the popular development framework.
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Michael Arrington / TechCrunch:
Twitter Said To Be Abandoning Ruby on Rails — We're hearing this from multiple sources: After nearly two years of high profile scaling problems, Twitter is planning to abandon Ruby on Rails as their web framework and start from scratch with PHP or Java (another solution is to stick …
Robert Scoble / Scobleizer:
The really interesting FriendFeed page to watch — You've seen my ego feed on FriendFeed. It's the one on the right side of the page on my newly-redesigned blog. You know, that's where you can find all the crap that +I+ have done on the Internet. All my Google Reader shared items.
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Peter Burrows / Business Week:
The Mac in the Gray Flannel Suit — More office workers infatuated with iPods and iPhones are demanding Macs. Is business ready? Is Apple? — Istvan Banyai — Soon after Michele Goins became chief information officer at Juniper Networks (JNPR) in February, she decided to respond …
Discussion:
The Secret Diary of Steve Jobs, Silicon Alley Insider, Cult of Mac and Byte of the Apple
BBC:
GTA game smashes UK sales records — Critically acclaimed video game Grand Theft Auto (GTA) IV is on course to beat the record for highest first week sales of any video game in the UK. — The title sold a record 609,000 copies on its first day of release, generating an estimated £24.4m ($48.5m).
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Randall Kennedy / Enterprise Desktop:
Streaming Office: Death knell for Google Apps? — It's the holy grail of punditry: You make a bold, unconventional prediction that's way out in front of an emerging trend, then get to gloat as that prediction comes true. In my case, the prediction involved Microsoft's recently (at the time) acquired SoftGrid technology.
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Michael Arrington / TechCrunch:
Coming to America: Getting visas to do business in Silicon Valley — One of the parlor tricks I like to perform when starting off any Silicon Valley talk or presentation is to ask the audience to raise their hand if they currently live in the area. Most people raise their hand.
Tom Krazit / One More Thing:
Lawyers, money needed for Psystar's legal battle — How much longer can Psystar get away with selling Open Computers? — Now that Psystar has satisfied any doubts that it's a real company making real products, the propriety of those products seems bound to be tested.
Joseph Weisenthal / paidContent.org:
Earnings: Viacom Q1 Revs Up 15 Percent; Tops Estimates; Rock Band Drives Media Growth — Another solid quarter from Viacom (NYSE: VIA), which continues to out perform. The parent of Rock Band (and a little network called MTV) announced Q1 revs of $3.1 billion, 15 percent up from last year's $2.71 billion.
Discussion:
Silicon Alley Insider
Sarah Gingichashvili / TFOT:
Quickies: Intelligent Sticky Notes — Home >> News >> General Technology — In an attempt to bring one of the most famous inventions of the 20th century into the digital age, scientists of the “Ambient Intelligence Group” at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology have developed the “intelligent stickies”.
Adam Pash / Lifehacker:
Get Free Wi-Fi Access on Your Laptop at Starbucks, Barnes and Noble — Our gadget-obsessed brothers at Gizmodo report that many AT&T hotspots—including Starbucks and Barnes and Noble—have started offering free Wi-Fi access to iPhone users. With a little ingenuity, the same free Wi-Fi access can be granted to your laptop.
Nick O'Neill / The Social Times:
MySpace Begins Charging for Application Promotion — Last week, MySpace opened up their applications for everybody. By adding an “apps” link to the top of the MySpace header, they began driving users to the applications page. The initial applications page used to be a simple directory.
Discussion:
p2pnet, ReadWriteWeb, Running With Foxes, CenterNetworks, Mashable!, VentureBeat, Silicon Alley Insider and The Equity Kicker
Marshall Kirkpatrick / ReadWriteWeb:
An Ode to RSS, On RSS Awareness Day — There's just a few hours left in what should be an international holiday - RSS Awareness Day. Thought up by the good folks at DailyBlogTips.com and unknown until this morning to even RSS forefather Dave Winer, RSS Awareness Day is a fantastic idea.
Marshall Kirkpatrick / ReadWriteWeb:
Digg Does Data Portability: Is This All We Get? — Social news site Digg announced today that it has added semantic markup to fields throughout its site as well as adding support for a handful of key microformats. By adding RDFa and DublinCore markup to news item pages …
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