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Techmeme News:
Guess what? Automated news doesn't quite work. — Any competent developer who tries to automate the selection of news headlines will inevitably discover that this approach always comes up a bit short. Automation does indeed bring a lot to the table — humans can't possibly discover and organize news as fast as computers can.
Discussion:
Technologizer, Decision Factory, Inc., timesonline.typepad.com, bub.blicio.us, Bits, Jobwire, broadstuff, L.A. Times Tech Blog, Life On the Wicked Stage, Data Mining, ReadWriteWeb, RexBlog.com, TECH.BLORGE.com, Webware.com, TechCrunch, Beet.TV, Search Engine Land, Susan Mernit's Blog and Glass House
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Eric Eldon / VentureBeat:
News aggregator Techmeme melds algorithms and humans
News aggregator Techmeme melds algorithms and humans
Discussion:
The Blog Herald
Larry Dignan / Between the Lines:
Adobe lays off 600 workers, CS4 demand weaker than expected — Adobe said Wednesday that it will eliminate 600 full-time positions, or roughly 8 percent of its workforce, amid weaker than expected fourth quarter earnings. — The company said in a statement that it will deliver fourth …
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Rick Turoczy / ReadWriteWeb:
Times Extra: The New York Times Opens Web Front Page to Outside Content — New York TimesAt a time when the online world is continually seen as a more trusted source of news, mainstream media outlets find themselves forced into the position of becoming more and more open to keep their readers coming back.
Josh Lowensohn / Webware.com:
New Firefox extension turns Amazon.com into illegal free-for-all — A new Firefox extension called Pirates of the Amazon lets users download movies, games, TV shows, and MP3s free of charge by cross referencing Amazon's product pages with torrent files from the Pirate Bay.
Ina Fried / Beyond Binary:
Online auctions remain piracy problem for Microsoft — Attention software buyers: There's no such thing as Microsoft Office “Blue Edition.” — That's the latest ruse making the rounds on the online auctions. Allegedly it supposed to be some sort of technician version of Microsoft's software …
William M. Bulkeley / Wall Street Journal:
IBM Offers ‘Microsoft-Free’ Desktop — Applications for Thin Clients Would Operate From Back-Office Server — International Business Machines Corp. is hoping to convince corporate customers that they no longer need Microsoft Corp. — IBM says it has created a “Microsoft-free” …
Discussion:
CNET News
Jose Fermoso / Gadget Lab:
Nintendo Thinking About Changing the Accelerometer in Wiimote — At the heart of the success of the Wii is the accelerometer chip inside the Wiimote that detects motion in three dimensional space. — Now, the company that provided that first chip, STMicroelectronics …
Michael Arrington / TechCrunch:
Amazon Launches Public Data Sets To Ease Research — Amazon released its previously announced Public Data Sets web service this evening. The project encourages developers, researchers, universities and businesses to upload large (non-confidential) data sets to Amazon - things like census data …
Discussion:
Between the Lines
Paul Graham:
The High-Res Society — For nearly all of history the success of a society was proportionate to its ability to assemble large and disciplined organizations. Those who bet on economies of scale generally won, which meant the largest organizations were the most successful ones.
Discussion:
The Equity Kicker
Bobbie Johnson / Guardian:
Startups seek more dignified exit than a belly flop into the dead pool — Remember the dead pool? No, not Clint Eastwood's fifth and final Dirty Harry movie, but the internet graveyard that became a byword for failure during the last dotcom crash. In the lowest days of 2000 and 2001 …
Darren Murph / Engadget:
Kogan intros world's second Android phone: Agora / Agora Pro — We'll be totally honest — we pretty much blew Ruslan Kogan off when he proclaimed that he was about to push out a $199 Android phone by the year's end. And truthfully, the guy still hasn't totally delivered …
Discussion:
iTWire, Gizmodo, www.kogan.com.au, Boing Boing Gadgets, CrunchGear, Android Phone Fans, Pocket-lint.co.uk, Mobility Site and PalmAddicts
The Boy Genius / Boy Genius Report:
Apple to sell a $99 4GB iPhone at Walmart? — We just got a tip that in addition to the iPhone 3G actually making its way to Walmart, as we exclusively told you, there will be a 4GB model priced at $99 with a 2-year agreement. We're not putting our stamp of approval behind this one just yet …
Financial Times:
Redstone agrees partial sale of 1,500 cinemas — Media mogul Sumner Redstone has reached agreement with his daughter, Shari, to put some of National Amusement's 1,500 cinemas on the block rather than the entire division, as part of debt-restructuring discussions to avoid selling more shares …
Jason Kincaid / TechCrunch:
Tapulous Brings Weezer And World-Class DJs To Tap Tap Revenge — iPhone development house Tapulous has announced two new premium versions of its mega-hit Tap Tap Revenge, both of which feature licensed music (still a rarity on the fledgling platform). Tap Tap Revenge is an intuitive …
Nick O'Neill / The Social Times:
Google Makes a Hard Push With Friend Connect — Tonight I've been seeing a lot of buzz about Friend Connect, Google's open initiative to take of Facebook Connect. The service lets you login using your Google, Orkut, or Plaxo account. Both MySpace and Facebook decided to opt-out of integrating …
Discussion:
VentureBeat
Om Malik / GigaOM:
Why Twitter Didn't Sell to Facebook — Really — The New York Times' Claire Miller attended a Churchill Club function to fete Twitter co-founder Evan Williams last night. In an onstage interview, Williams talked about many different aspects of his micro-blogging service, which now has 6 million subscribers.
Gavin Clarke / The Register:
Sun sneaks JavaFX Mobile into desktop FX — Any RIA in a storm — Sun Microsystems, it is generally felt, lost the desktop to Microsoft a long time ago. Aware of this, Sun in recent years evangelized mobile as Java's habitat - mobile is, after all, where Microsoft's at its weakest.
Gregg Keizer / Computerworld:
Virtually every Windows PC at risk, says Secunia — Almost all PCs scanned by patch tool have an unpatched app; 46% have 11-plus — Computerworld) More than 98% of Windows computers harbor at least one unpatched application, and nearly half contain 11 or more programs at risk from attack …
Meghan Keane / Epicenter:
Greystripe Brings Flash to the iPhone, Sort Of — Adobe may be hard at work creating a version of its Flash Player that works on the iPhone, but until Apple gives its OK, iPhone users must muddle along without viewing most online video content. — Except that on Monday …
John Mahoney / Gizmodo:
The KT Listening Room Shipping Container: My New Favorite Way to Travel — Forget Emirates' Sultan Class on the A380—the KT listening room built out of a converted 20-foot shipping container is the way I want to make my next trans-continental voyage. — Yeah, just drop me in the cargo hold …
Matt Buchanan / Gizmodo:
Barack Obama Uses a Zune — After all of the misinformation and dirty lies spread about Obama over the course of the presidential campaign, this is the most shocking I've heard about him: He uses a Zune. This can't be possible. — Why? Because, as has been widely reported, Obama, many of his staffers and Joe Biden use a Mac.
Discussion:
Business Technology, The Clog, Digital Joystick, LAPTOP Magazine, The Microsoft Blog and Gawker
Arkansas IMC:
Forget Cyber Monday: COBY Plans “Moore's Law” MIDGET PC for $100 in March — Sales of 100 million, worldwide, in five years? — Coby Electronics, a leading international manufacturer and distributor of electronics consumer-packaged goods for discount stores, plans to introduce the first under-$100 laptop by March 2009.
Discussion:
UMPCPortal, CrunchGear, Out of the Box, Liliputing, Gizmodo, LAPTOP Magazine, thegadgetsite and Engadget
Mary Jane Irwin / Forbes:
‘Games Are The Convergence Of Everything’ — “Bioshock” creator Ken Levine would rather swing from a noose than stop making games. — It is unfair to give Ken Levine all the credit for “Bioshock's” success. A team of some 70 people built the game about an underwater haven unhinged by its own unwavering objectivism.