Top Items:
Nancy Gohring / Computerworld:
The Android fine print: kill switch and other tidbits — An uproar erupted when iPhone users discovered a so-called remote kill switch on their phones — will it spur the same reaction in users of the G1, the first Android phone? — In the Android Market terms of service …
Discussion:
Download Squad, Ars Technica, Gadget Lab, The Open Road, Electronista, The Register, MacRumors, Forum Nokia Blogs, WebProNews, Gadgetell, Gizmodo, The iPhone Blog, AndroidGuys, CrunchGear, Mashable!, eWeek, InformationWeek, AppScout, Android Authority, Boing Boing Gadgets, Engadget Mobile and Slashdot
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Walter S. Mossberg / Personal Technology:
Google Answers the iPhone — In the exciting new category of modern hand-held computers — devices that fit in your pocket but are used more like a laptop than a traditional phone — there has so far been only one serious option. But that will all change on Oct. 22, when T-Mobile …
Discussion:
Download Squad, Search Engine Land, NEWSFACTOR, Technologizer, GigaOM, mathewingram.com/work, TechCrunch, Broadband Developments, blogs.chron.com, dailywireless.org, Know It All, L.A. Times Tech Blog, Washington Post, Texas Startup Blog, The Apple Blog, WebWorkerDaily, Techmamas, Silicon Alley Insider, Phil Windley's Technometria, I4U News, Brier Dudley's blog and Alexander van Elsas's Weblog …
Matthew Miller / Smartphones and Cell Phones:
Review: Over 260 images and 5 videos of the T-Mobile G1 Google Android device — The biggest mobile news of 2007 was definitely the Apple iPhone and I think the biggest news of this year is the Google Android. I enjoyed my trip out to see the T-Mobile G1 launch last month …
Jason Chen / Gizmodo:
T-Mobile G1 Google Android Phone Review
T-Mobile G1 Google Android Phone Review
Discussion:
InfoWorld, CrunchGear, Engadget, New York Times, mocoNews.net, SlashPhone, AndroidGuys, Guardian, jkOnTheRun, Profy, Brier Dudley's blog, VentureBeat and Unwired View
Rex Crum / MarketWatch:
Ballmer says Yahoo deal would “make sense economically” — ORLANDO, Fla. (MarketWatch) — Microsoft Corp. (MSFT: , , ) Chief Executive Steve Ballmer said Thursday that he thinks a Microsoft acquisition of Yahoo Inc. (YHOO: , , ) would still “make sense economically” for both companies shareholders.
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Amy Thomson / Bloomberg:
Microsoft-Yahoo Deal Still Makes Sense, Ballmer Says — Oct. 16 (Bloomberg) — Microsoft Corp. Chief Executive Officer Steve Ballmer said a deal with Yahoo! Inc. may still make economic sense for shareholders of both companies, prompting Yahoo shares to jump as much as 12 percent.
Larry Dignan / Between the Lines:
Ballmer: It's ok to wait until Windows 7; Yahoo still ‘makes sense’; Google Apps ‘primitive’ — Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer on Thursday defended Vista's honor-again-but at least gave a nod to enterprise buyers that planned to skip it and upgrade when Windows 7 launches.
Eric Savitz / Tech Trader Daily:
Yahoo Shrs Jump; Did Ballmer Hint On New Bid? — Did Microsoft (MSFT) CEO Steve Ballmer just hint that the company might make a new bid for Yahoo (YHOO)? — The market seems to think so. Marketwatch is reporting that Ballmer today said a combination of the two companies would “make sense economically” for both companies.
Discussion:
Silicon Alley Insider
Trevor Claiborne / Inside AdWords:
Build your own display ads in minutes — Today we released the AdWords display ad builder, which lets you create professional-looking display ads in AdWords without needing to hire a designer or start from scratch. If you've wanted to expand beyond your text ad campaigns …
Discussion:
Search Engine Land, Epicenter, Search Engine Watch, MarketingVOX, WebProNews and Andy Beal's Marketing Pilgrim
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Apple:
ABC, CBS, FOX & NBC Offer Incredible Lineup of Programming in Stunning HD on the iTunes Store — iTunes Tops 200 Million TV Episodes Sold, Including Over One Million HD Episodes — Apple® today announced that all four of the major networks are offering primetime programs …
Discussion:
The Apple Blog, MacUser, MacDailyNews, Macsimum News, AppScout, 901am, Engadget HD, Macworld and Insanely Great Mac
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Arik Hesseldahl / Business Week:
Inside the BlackBerry Bold — Research firm iSuppli says it costs Research In Motion $169.41 to make the smartphone, lower than some Street estimates—and promising for RIM's profit margins — The smartphone race between upstart Apple (AAPL) and incumbents like Research In Motion (RIMM) is well under way.
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Justin Scheck / Wall Street Journal:
H-P Making Touch Screen Laptop — PC Giant Aims to Spur Demand With Line of Products Using Touch Technology — Hewlett-Packard Co., aiming to boost its personal computer sales amid a deteriorating economy and soft holiday season, is increasingly turning to touch-screen technology.
Discussion:
Liliputing, DailyTech, TechSpot, Engadget, The Tech Report, Electronista, SlashGear, Lockergnome Blog Network, Gizmodo and MediaBytes with Shelly Palmer
Harris Corporation:
Harris Corporation and Google TV Ads Work Together to Expand Television Advertising Opportunities — Service Enables Traffic Customers Access to New Sales Channels Through Google TV Ads™ — Harris Corporation (NYSE:HRS), an international communications and information technology company …
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Michael Masnick / Techdirt:
Details Released On The Radiohead Experiment Results: A Tremendous Success — While Trent Reznor has been very open in discussing the results of his various business model experiments, Radiohead has been notoriously quiet about it — leading some to falsely assume that the experiment was a failure.
Discussion:
Listening Post, Music Ally, paidContent.org, Global Nerdy, Mashable! and blackrimglasses
Ryan Paul / Ars Technica:
Opera study: only 4.13% of the web is standards-compliant — Browser maker Opera has published the early results of an ongoing study that aims to provide insight into the structure of Internet content. To conduct this research project, Opera created the Metadata Analysis and Mining Application …
Discussion:
Open Sources
Aude Lagorce / MarketWatch:
Nokia's profit falls 30% but margins hold — Industry leader loses market share but confirms outlook — LONDON (MarketWatch) — Nokia Corp. on Thursday posted a 30% drop in third-quarter profit and a 5% decline in sales, but the world's largest maker of mobile phones managed …
Michael Masnick / Techdirt:
EA Brushes Off DRM Complainers As Fringe 0.2% — from the listening-to-your-customers dept — It would appear that gaming company EA got the wrong message concerning DRM after its Spore DRM debacle. While EA eventually backed down, it certainly did plenty to damage its own reputation in the gaming community.
Discussion:
Custom PC
Michael Kahn / Reuters:
Doctors warn of rash from mobile phone use — LONDON (Reuters) - Doctors baffled by an unexplained rash on people's ears or cheeks should be on alert for a skin allergy caused by too much mobile phone use, the British Association of Dermatologists said on Thursday.
Michael Arrington / TechCrunch:
YouTube Founder Compares Online Video To Nascent TV Market — YouTube Cofounder Chad Hurley spoke at the MIPCOM Conference in Cannes, France yesterday. — In the talk, which is transcribed below, Hurley compares the current state of online video to the nascent years of television.
Discussion:
Podcasting News
Philip Elmer-DeWitt / Apple 2.0:
Macintosh share of the U.S. market tops 9% — Almost lost in the noise of the Presidential debates, the collapse of the Dow and the milling of those new MacBook aluminum unibodies were the preliminary reports from Gartner and IDC this week that showed sharp gains for Apple (AAPL) in third-quarter domestic computer shipments.
Erick Schonfeld / TechCrunch:
Prosper And Other P2P Lenders Get Squeezed By The Credit Crunch — Prosper and other peer-to-peer lenders like Zopa and Lending Club may turn out to be collateral damage from the credit crisis. Yesterday, Prosper suspended new lending in order to register with the S.E.C to create a secondary marketplace for the loans on its site.
Discussion:
Bits
Paul Miller / Engadget:
Panasonic firms up pricing for Lumix DMC-G1 mini-DSLR for mid-November launch — We had it on good authority that Panasonic's Micro Four Thirds debut, the Lumix DMC-G1, was tracking for a November release at $799, and Panasonic USA just dropped some PR to exactly that effect.