Top Items:
Kara Swisher / BoomTown:
Microsoft's Latest Web Stumble: Kevin Johnson Out — Kevin Johnson (pictured here), the point person for Microsoft's failed bid to buy Yahoo, is leaving the company to run Juniper Networks. — As the president of its Platforms and Services Division, the smooth Johnson has been trying …
RELATED:
Kara Swisher / BoomTown:
Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer's Full Memo to the Troops About New Reorg — Here is the full memo Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer sent out to the troops about the big changes in its organization, including the departure of Platforms and Services Division President Kevin Johnson, in which he addresses Apple, Yahoo, Google and more:
Microsoft:
Microsoft Announces Reorganization of Windows and Online Services Business — Platforms & Services Division to Split Into Two Groups and Report to CEO Steve Ballmer. — Microsoft Corp. today announced that the Platforms & Services Division (PSD) will be split into two groups …
Robert A. Guth / Wall Street Journal:
Microsoft's Johnson Heads to Juniper — The head of Microsoft Corp.'s online business, who led the company's bid to buy Yahoo Inc., is leaving the software giant to run Juniper Networks Inc., according to people familiar with the situation. — The departure of Kevin Johnson …
Discussion:
Tech Trader Daily, ChannelWeb Complete Feed, Tech Tracks, Microsoft News Tracker, Tech Ticker and Pulse 2.0
Mary Jo Foley / All about Microsoft:
Microsoft splits its Platforms & Services unit in two
Microsoft splits its Platforms & Services unit in two
Discussion:
Todd Bishop's Microsoft Blog
Dick / Identity 2.0:
Facebook Connect - fatal blow for OpenID? — At F8 today, Facebook rolled out their Facebook Connect platform. With a small amount of code, other sites can integrate the Facebook identity system into their site. The keynote reminded me of early days of Microsoft as they rallied developers …
Discussion:
David Recordon's Blog
RELATED:
Michael Arrington / TechCrunch:
Liveblogging the Facebook Developer Conference — The TechCrunch team is on site at the Facebook Developer conference, and we'll be live blogging the news. Mark Zuckerberg's Keynote starts at 1:30 pm PST. — Facebook's press release is here. — Live Coverage
Justin Smith / Inside Facebook:
Facebook Announces “Great Apps” …
Facebook Announces “Great Apps” …
Discussion:
Industry Standard, Stay N\' Alive, Facebook Press Releases, TechCrunch, eWeek, Global by Design and metarand
Cedric Dupont / The Official Google Blog:
Knol is open to everyone — A few months ago we announced that we were testing a new product called Knol. Knols are authoritative articles about specific topics, written by people who know about those subjects. Today, we're making Knol available to everyone.
Discussion:
paidContent.org, mathewingram.com/work, Voices, Journalistopia, TechWeb, Lifehacker, TECH.BLORGE.com, HipMojo.com, ProBlogger Blog Tips, Google Blogoscoped, Guardian Unlimited, Search Engine Journal, The Register, Maximum PC all, The Inquisitr, Download Squad, Pixel Bits, ReadWriteWeb, Andy Beal's Marketing Pilgrim, Communications …, Brij's One More Idea, Tech Beat and BetaNews
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Nigel Morris / The Independent:
Music industry to tax downloaders — £30 ‘licence fee’ set to revolutionise illegal file-sharing — Internet users could face an annual charge of up to £30 to download music, under plans to be unveiled today that aim to tackle illegal file-sharing.
RELATED:
BBC:
Net firms in music pirates deal
Net firms in music pirates deal
Discussion:
TorrentFreak, The Register, broadstuff, Listening Post, Tech Confidential and ringtonia.com
Matt Buchanan / Gizmodo:
Why We Still Need the iPhone App Black Market — A year ago, we said that no iPhone SDK meant no killer apps. It came, and the apps are here in staggering numbers. But many of the amazing apps and concepts we grew to love as unofficial apps aren't here, and only about 100 of the 900+ apps …
Kevin Michaluk / CrackBerry.com blogs:
BlackBerry Kickstart 8220 Hands-On Hardware Review — The Web's First Review of the BlackBerry KickStart 8220. — Grab a cup of coffee, sit back and relax! It's time for another hands-on review of a yet to be officially announced or released BlackBerry smartphone.
Jason Kincaid / TechCrunch:
A Xobni Executive Leaves The Red-Hot Startup. But Why? — Xobni, the Y Combinator email startup that turned down an acquisition offer from Microsoft earlier this year, has just lost its VP Engineering and first employee, Gabor Cselle. Cselle joined the company in March 2007 …
Sophos:
Hackers attack businesses, blogs and Web 2.0 sites, reveals Sophos Security Threat Report — Cybercrime gangs enlist the help of Blogspot, Facebook and Angelina Jolie in first half of 2008 — IT security and control firm Sophos has published new research into the first six months of cybercrime in 2008.
Ryan Naraine / Zero Day:
Attack code published for DNS flaw — The urgency to patch Dan Kaminsky's DNS cache poisoning vulnerability just went up a few notches. — Exploit code for the flaw, which allows the insertion of malicious DNS records into the cache of the target nameserver, has been added to Metasploit, a freely distributed attack/pen-testing tool.
Top Muffin:
3G iPhone Availability — DISCLAIMER: This page uses data from Apple's site that is retrieved every 15 minutes. — However, it does appear that Apple only updates the data every night at midnight PDT. — I strongly advise calling your local Apple store to check inventory before visiting said store.
Discussion:
9 to 5 Mac
Mike Atherton / Times of London:
Hackers start to target Apple Macs — As more and more PC users switch to Macs, they're bringing viruses and other malicious software with them — When Apple beat Wall Street expectations convincingly on Monday after its best quarter ever, its share price fell.
Discussion:
MacUser
Walter S. Mossberg / Personal Technology:
Apple's MobileMe Is Far Too Flawed To Be Reliable — People who work for large corporations are used to having their email, contacts and calendar appointments synchronized instantly among their various computers and smart phones. But average consumers haven't had an easy way to do that.
Tom Krazit / CNET News.com:
Intel storage chips point to SoC future — Intel's first system-on-a-chip designed around the x86 instruction set is ready for the world. — The company is planning to announce the catchily-titled EP80579 chips Thursday for its customers building storage and networking equipment.