Top Items:
PR Newswire:
Toshiba Launches Industry's First 512GB Solid State Drive and Next-Generation SSD Family Using 43nm MLC NAND — New SSD Family Achieves High Levels of Performance, Endurance, Capacity and Reliability to Meet Market Requirements for Notebook Computers, Gaming and Home Entertainment Systems
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John Gruber / Daring Fireball:
That He Not Busy Being Born Is Busy Dying … A big part of what makes Apple so fascinating is that they're so utterly unlike other companies of similar size and stature. It's hard to imagine any other company abandoning something like Apple's traditional role at Macworld Expo.
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Tom Krazit / CNET News:
Apple's blind-side hit on IDG
Apple's blind-side hit on IDG
Discussion:
Macworld, Tech Check with Jim Goldman, iPhone Savior, Infinite Loop and The Digital Home
Rob Beschizza / Boing Boing Gadgets:
Mac OS X Netbook Compatibility Chart — Who needs Psystar? — Apple says it's had “pretty interesting ideas” for a Mac netbook, but it's everyday users who've already taken action. Due to their similar technical underpinnings, most of the popular netbooks can run OS X …
Zach Epstein / Boy Genius Report:
2009 is the year of the Moto for Verizon; more upcoming handsets revealed — When our ninjas get going they don't stop until the job is done. Yesterday your pals here at BGR gave you an exclusive preview of four tasty upcoming Motorola handsets - codenamed FLASH, RUSH 2, CALGARY and INFERNO.
Discussion:
Fast Company, Electronista, Unwired View, SlashPhone, CrunchGear, Gizmodo, Engadget Mobile, PhoneDog.com Cell …, Gadget Lab, Engadget, The Toybox and Boing Boing Gadgets
Marshall Kirkpatrick / ReadWriteWeb:
Entrepreneurs: We Will Happily Respect Your Embargoes — Michael Arrington at TechCrunch said today that his site will no longer respect press embargoes, the informal system where press outfits agree to hold back publishing until an agreed upon time so that multiple sources can cover a story well.
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Michael Arrington / TechCrunch:
Death To The Embargo — PR firms are out of control.
Death To The Embargo — PR firms are out of control.
Discussion:
CloudAve, louisgray.com, PRNewser, CenterNetworks, Smalltalk Tidbits …, Six Kids and a Full Time Job, Pudding Relations, L.A. Times Tech Blog, Boing Boing Gadgets, CrunchGear, PR 2.0, Stage Two Consulting, Ross Mayfield's Weblog, Andy Beal's Marketing Pilgrim, ParisLemon, Daggle, broadstuff, TomsTechBlog.com, Signal to Noise, Drew B's take on tech PR and Life On the Wicked Stage
Frederic Lardinois / ReadWriteWeb:
The iPhone is Apple's Netbook: Almost Half of All Traffic from WiFi Networks — According to the latest report from AdMob, 42% of all requests from iPhones to Admob's partners worldwide are coming in over WiFi instead of through the networks of mobile operators.
Guardian:
100 top sites for the year ahead — Two years after we last picked the web's cream of the crop, our latest selection finds that location-based services, work-anywhere collaboration and video are prominent — The online world has changed dramatically even since we last drew up a list of 100 useful sites in December 2006.
Jessica Guynn / L.A. Times Tech Blog:
Major leadership shakeup at LinkedIn: Nye leaves, Hoffman back at the helm — After a two-year stint in which he helped propel dramatic growth, LinkedIn Corp. Chief Executive Dan Nye is handing back the reins to company founder Reid Hoffman in a major leadership shakeup at one of Silicon Valley's hottest companies.
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Robert Scoble / Scobleizer:
Are bloggers & social networks killing the big shows? — I've noticed a trend lately (actually I noticed it back when I worked at Microsoft and my bosses kept refusing to buy booths at conferences, saying they didn't return the ROI, but that trend has grown and grown big time).
Michael Arrington / TechCrunch:
Joost Just Gives Up On P2P Altogether — Joost's two year old online video service was a pretty darned smart idea when it first launched. — Instead of streaming video through the Joost website, users would download a Mozilla-based client and watch it there instead. The user experience could be more tightly controlled.
Discussion:
Podcasting News, broadstuff, paidContent.org, Lifehacker, Ars Technica, Industry Standard and Clickety Clack
Sarah Perez / ReadWriteWeb:
Facebook Growth Explodes, Site Reaches 140 Million Active Users — If there's any doubt that Facebook is rapidly becoming the next big thing in social networks, you only need look at their recent statistics. According to new reports, in recent weeks Facebook is growing at a rate of 600,000 users each day …
Rory Cellan-Jones / BBC:
Sky moves towards 3D broadcasts — Sky has filmed several sporting events using the new technology — Sky TV says it has made a significant step towards bringing 3D television to British viewers. — The satellite broadcaster says it has successfully tested the delivery of 3D programming …
Chris Williams / The Register:
More execs quit Phorm — CFO and UK CEO out — When half of Phorm's board quit earlier this month, it was spun as a strategy disagreement between the US and UK operations. But now, the firm's London-based UK chief executive has quit too, along with its chief beancounter.
Jonny / Distorted-Loop.com:
Apple takes an iPhone slice of Imagination — Despite public clamour over the rift between Apple and Macworld, the company's secretive plans to develop its own mobile processors for future iPods, iPhones and other devices remain critical to its future, or so it seems.
Google Earth Blog:
New York City in Photo-Realistic 3D Now in Google Earth — Google has updated the 3D buildings in Google Earth for New York City! This is a HUGE update with at least hundreds (if not thousands) of new 3D buildings with photo textures applied. Basically, Google has completed nearly every building …
InfoWorld:
Will Capgemini convince enterprises to trust the cloud? — Large tech vendors such as Sun Microsystems and Red Hat, small ones like Elastra and RightScale, and even consultancy Capgemini are all clamoring to help big businesses get on Amazon.com's Elastic Compute Cloud offering, or EC2.
Josh Lowensohn / Webware.com:
Adobe squeezes AIR out of beta for Linux users — Adobe Systems on Wednesday is taking the Linux version of its Adobe Integrated Runtime (AIR) product out of beta, and bringing it up to speed with the versions available for Windows and Mac users. — The new version differs from previous beta versions …
Discussion:
Download Squad, AIR, The Register, VentureBeat, Beet.TV, Computerworld, eWeek and The Blog Herald
Walter Dawkins / Newsweek:
Broadcast News — Remember when you had to be home at 8 p.m. to watch a favorite TV show? Devices like TiVo and your cable company's digital video recorder changed all that. Then along came the Slingbox, a device that lets you watch your home DVR or cable box from anywhere in the world using your laptop and an Internet connection.
Discussion:
MobileDevicesToday
Kerrie Lenhart / AdWords Agency Blog:
AdWords Editor v7.0 — It's update time again! We've released version 7.0 of AdWords Editor for Windows and Mac, and have included some sought-after metrics. This release of AdWords Editor includes data for first page bid estimates and keyword Quality Score.
Danny Sullivan / Search Engine Land:
Ask.com Plays The Google AdWords Arbitrage Game — Ah, Ask.com. Since I wrote their obituary in March, not much has got me thinking they'll make a comeback. Sure, there was the gimmick of kind of bringing back Jeeves himself. But the spate of “hotels.ask.com” ads I see them running …
Jason Kincaid / TechCrunch:
SnapTell: One Of The Coolest iPhone Apps Gets Even Better — SnapTell, the awesome iPhone app that lets you take a photo of nearly any CD, DVD, book, or video game to get instant product reviews, has just released an upgrade that introduces a number of useful new features.
Discussion:
digg.com