Top Items:
Ryan Block / Engadget:
Loads of fake Apple shots hit the web: 3G iPhone pre-WWDC edition — It's a few days before a big Apple event, and you know what that means: a ridiculous amount of really bad fake Apple product shots. Actually, you have to hand it to this first guy, pictured above.
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Matt Hickey / CrunchGear:
Breaking: Exclusive leaked pics of the iPhone 2! Thinner design? Check! Different colors? Check! Video chatting? Check and check! — It wasn't long ago that my inbox was full of screen caps from an image editing program of a new iPod, it was a fat yet small iPod that we now know as the 3rd gen Nano.
Financial Times:
Apple relents on iPhones subsidy — By Andrew Parker in London, Paul Taylor in New York and Richard Waters in San Francisco — The new version of the Apple iPhone is set to be sold at significantly lower prices than the existing one, in a tacit acknowledgement by the US technology company …
Om Malik / GigaOM:
T-Mobile Sues Starbucks Over Free Wifi — What do they say - one man's meat is another man's poison. Looks like that was for T-Mobile USA that has filed a lawsuit against Starbucks, which had recently switched over from T-Mobile to AT&T. — AT&T offering free WiFi at Starbucks locations …
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Desiree Everts / CNET News.com:
T-Mobile sues Starbucks over Wi-Fi deal — T-Mobile USA is suing Starbucks, accusing the coffee behemoth of a breach of contract by allowing AT&T to provide customers with free Wi-Fi access in its cafes. — In a complaint filed Thursday in New York State Supreme Court in Manhattan …
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PC World
Edith Honan / Reuters:
T-Mobile sues Starbucks over AT&T Internet deal — NEW YORK (Reuters) - T-Mobile USA is suing Starbucks, saying the coffee shop chain secretly colluded with AT&T to offer free WiFi Internet access in its cafes despite an exclusive agreement with T-Mobile. — In the lawsuit …
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Mashable!, Engadget, Seattle Post-Intelligencer, Unwired View, TECH.BLORGE.com, mocoNews.net, MobileBurn.com, DSLreports and CrunchGear
Mark Hachman / AppScout:
Rumor: Amazon Hit With Denial-of-Service Attack, Again — Amazon.com was taken down by a distributed denial-of-service attack that struck the Web site's load-balancing system, according to a rumor that's begun circulating among security professionals. — According to a security professional …
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The Inquisitr
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The Official Google Blog:
One Fish, Two Fish, Red Fish, Blue Fish — You may have noticed that Google has a new favicon, the small icon you see in your browser next to the URL or in your bookmarks list. Some people have wondered why we changed our favicon — after all, we hadn't in 8.5 years(!).
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Guardian Unlimited, TechCrunch, Search Engine Land, Mashable!, Andy Beal's Marketing Pilgrim, Pulse 2.0 and TECH.BLORGE.com
Lucia Moses / Mediaweek:
Rodale's Ostroff Exits; Zinczenko, Michaelson, Others Promoted — Rodale announced a management shakeup designed to strengthen its growing e-commerce, international and Men's Health businesses. Departing in the shuffle is Bill Ostroff, who was president of Rodale Interactive and chief marketing officer.
James Lewin / Podcasting News:
Apple Should Open Up Apple TV — Apple TV is seen by many as a technology also-ran. — \While it's sold several million units, it's missing that certain something that would turn the device into a hit, like the iPod, the iPhone, or even Apple's notebook computers. — Apple TV is perfectly positioned to take off.
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Micro Persuasion
Dion Almaer / Ajaxian:
An interview with 280 North on Objective-J and Cappuccino — As I say in this podcast interview, I got an early look at 280 Slides the application that launched yesterday to much acclaim. People are calling it “Keynote on the Web”, which the team finds very humbling, and hope …
Dan Mitchell / New York Times:
Keep It Short, Make It Instant — SOME of us find those bouncing or flashing icons on computer screen to be disruptive and distracting. But apparently, many workers believe instant messaging causes less interruption than other forms of communication like phone calls, e-mail and talking face to face.
Dylan Tweney / Epicenter:
AT&T Embraces BitTorrent, May Consider Usage-Based Pricing — AT&T's new chief technical officer, John Donovan, wants you to know that his company does not, under any circumstances, slow down BitTorrent users or throw other monkey wrenches in the operation of specific applications. — “No. Never have.