Top Items:
comScore:
comScore Releases November 2008 U.S. Search Engine Rankings — comScore, Inc. (NASDAQ: SCOR), a leader in measuring the digital world, today released its monthly comScore qSearch analysis of the U.S. search marketplace. In November 2008, Americans conducted 12.3 billion core searches …
RELATED:
Todd Bishop / TechFlash:
Google search share hits new high, as Microsoft matches its all-time low — Will this provide more fuel for Yahoo-Microsoft-search negotiations? New numbers from comScore Networks show Google rising to a record 63.5 percent of U.S. search queries in November, continuing to steadily build …
Nicholas Carlson / Silicon Alley Insider:
Digg's Miserable Business — BusinessWeek got ahold of social news site Digg's financials. — For a site that gets as much traffic as Digg.com does — 22.6 million monthly uniques, according to Quantcast — the numbers are gruesome: — Last year the company lost $2.8 million on $4.8 million of revenue
Michael Arrington / TechCrunch:
Facebook Stares Down Labels Over Project Playlist Takedown Demand — Earlier this afternoon MySpace scrubbed all traces of Project Playlist music widgets from the site, and users are unable to embed any further playlists. The scrub was the result of infringement notices from the major labels …
Discussion:
The Social
RELATED:
Michael Arrington / TechCrunch:
MySpace Puts The Hammer Down On Project Playlist — MySpace is getting back into the business of blocking third party widgets, it seems - today they've banned embedded music widgets from the fast growing Project Playlist. But unlike previous 2006 and 2007 blocks of iMeem, Photobucket and many others …
T-Marco / Cell Phone Signal:
T-Mobile G2 coming on January 26th '09 — Yesterday we told you about the new update coming to T-Mobile G1. This update will include new features like mms, and video capable. Unfortunately, some features will not be including for the G1. Instead, they will be include in feature Android devices..oops.. That's right!
Discussion:
Boy Genius Report, The Toybox, AndroidGuys, IntoMobile, Android Phone Fans, TmoNews, MobileCrunch and MobileDevicesToday
Michael Masnick / Techdirt:
Why Do Undersea Cables Seem To Get Severed In Bunches? — There's just something about undersea internet cables that seem to have them get severed in groups. You may recall the various conspiracy theories that cropped up, at the beginning of the year, after four such cables were broken …
Sean O'Malley / The Official Google Blog:
New search-by-style options for Google Image Search — Many of us use Google Image Search to find imagery of people, clip art for presentations, diagrams for reports, and of course symbols and patterns for artistic inspiration. Unfortunately, searching for the perfect image can be challenging …
fibresystems.org:
3 cables cut this morning (Sea Me We3 partly + Sea Me We4 + FLAG)France Telecom Marine cable ship about to depart — PARIS — France Telecom observed today that 3 major underwater cables were cut: “Sea Me We 4” at 7:28am, “Sea Me We3” at 7:33am and FLAG at 8:06am.
RELATED:
Ryan Singel / Epicenter:
The Huffington Post Slammed for Content Theft — The Huffington Post, a venture-capital-backed new media site that mixes links to other sites content with hundreds of celebrity and volunteer blogger posts, is being accused of slimy business practices by a handful of smaller publications …
Discussion:
Gawker
MG Siegler / VentureBeat:
Google Reader quietly launches a “What's hot” area. Where's the “most shared” area? — Given the number of people who use Google Reader's “Starred items” and “Shared items” features, you'd think Google would have some very good data for creating a killer “best of” area for stories across the web.
Discussion:
Google Reader
John Cook / TechFlash:
Mag regrets Count Me In CEO story, says it went to press before scandal — Talk about bad timing. The latest issue of Seattle Business Monthly features a cover story on Count Me In Chief Executive Terry Drayton, whose Bellevue company has been at the center of a scandal for failing to pay …
David Kravets / Threat Level:
No ISP Filtering Under New RIAA Copyright Strategy — The Recording Industry Association of America on Friday announced a new strategy in its quest to curtail online copyright infringement — a plan that for now requires no filtering from internet service providers.
RELATED:
Fred von Lohmann / Electronic Frontier Foundation:
RIAA v. The People Turns from Lawsuits to 3 Strikes
RIAA v. The People Turns from Lawsuits to 3 Strikes
Discussion:
L.A. Times Tech Blog, InformationWeek, Public Knowledge, Joystiq, LAist, TECH.BLORGE.com, Coolfer, NewTeeVee, PC World, CNET News and GMSV
Dave / MacBlogz:
One More Thing: Apple's New Multi-touch Mighty Mouse — Let's face it, the Mighty Mouse is flawed. Luckily, Apple has filed for numerous patents directly hinting at a multi-touch Mighty Mouse, which could prove to bring us an unexpected treat sometime in the near future.
Jenna Wortham / Bits:
Filtering Twitter, One Tweet at a Time — This is part of a series of posts this week on happenings in the sprawling but always succinct world of Twitter. — Here are a few that caught our eye: — As the San Francisco-based Twitter grows in popularity, third-party developers have jumped …
Nicholas Carlson / Silicon Alley Insider:
Google's Secret Revenue Weapon Revealed (GOOG) — All quarter long, Wall Street has been trying to figure out why Google has introduced a slew of new revenue-generating products and suddenly developed new religion with regard to costs. The obvious answer is that Google is light on revenue and desperately trying to make the quarter.
Discussion:
HipMojo.com
Chris Ziegler / Engadget:
UPDATED: Palm doesn't confirm Nova launch at CES, but they may as well have — Use a Palm phone? Like the idea of Nova? We hope so, because the company revealed in its earnings call yesterday that it'd be transitioning its entire lineup over to the new, homegrown platform …
RELATED:
Sascha Segan / PC Magazine:
Palm CEO Confirms ‘Nova’ OS Is in the Wild
Palm CEO Confirms ‘Nova’ OS Is in the Wild
Discussion:
Industry Standard
Eric Lai / Computerworld:
Lenovo to release ThinkPad laptop with 2 LCD screens — The 11-lb. W700ds is ‘the nitro-burning drag racer’ version of the button-downed business laptop, Lenovo exec says — Computerworld) Lenovo Group Ltd. today announced the release of a ThinkPad laptop that takes the “desktop replacement” …
Matt Richtel / Bits:
Job Losses Hit the Tech Sector — In the fine print of a jobs report published today is some mixed news for Silicon Valley. — For the first time in this downturn, the region lost jobs; it has 4,000 fewer jobs than it did a year ago at this time, and its unemployment rate is 7 percent …
David Meyer / CNET News:
Google reveals upcoming Android features — Imminent enhancements to Google's Android mobile platform have been revealed this week, in the form of a development effort called “Cupcake.” — Android is in the process of being turned by Google from its own development project into open source.
Erick Schonfeld / TechCrunch:
Pandora Hits 20 Million Registered Users (Via Twitter) — Just in via Twitter: Pandora has registered its 20 millionth user. The three-year old music streaming service is trying to hold its own despite tough economics and recent layoffs. — Its music-recommendation engine pumps …
Erick Schonfeld / TechCrunch:
Meebo Passes IMs Between MySpace And Facebook — MySpace and Facebook may be frenemies forever, but now they have a new mutual friend that will pass notes between them. Meebo, the Web-based IM service, now supports IM accounts from both social networks. That means you can enter your Facebook …
Discussion:
RotorBlog.com, CenterNetworks, Obsessable, AppScout, VentureBeat, Webware.com, WebProNews and Mashable!
Eric Savitz / Tech Trader Daily:
Google: Is The Search Ad Business In Trouble? — It has been the conventional wisdom in the online advertising sector that while the display ad business was headed for rough time as the economy eroded, search-based ads would hold up better. The theory is that display ads, paid for on a CPM …
Discussion:
Clickety Clack