Top Items:
Jesus Diaz / Gizmodo:
Android G2 Photos: Thinner and No Keyboard — Here they are: Alleged spy photos of the second generation Android cellphone, the thinner, shinier, and totally lickable T-Mobile G2 made by HTC. It has no keyboard and its back looks oh-so-soap-bar-smooth: — As you can see, it has a 3.2 megapixel camera.
Discussion:
Salon, Google Watch, Silicon Alley Insider, ChannelWeb, Android Phone Fans, Electronista, AndroidGuys, Local Mobile Search, MobileCrunch, IntoMobile, TheNextWeb.com, Google Android News …, VentureBeat, GPS Obsessed, Boy Genius Report, Homotron.net, InformationWeek, Unwired View, I4U News, Crave and Gadgetell
Thomas Ricker / Engadget:
Apple quietly updates $999 white MacBook with unibody specs — Hmmm, what's this? Did Apple just update its lowly, $999 white plastic polycarbonate MacBook to more closely align with its new unibody MacBooks? Why yes, yes it has... sometime in the last 3 days according to Google's cache.
Discussion:
Gizmodo, MacRumors, SlashGear, Crave, Gadget Lab, DailyTech, Gear Live, Alice Hill's Real Tech News, I4U News, Electronista, MacDailyNews and Webomatica
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Daniel Shen / DigiTimes:
Microsoft expected to deliver Windows Mobile 6.5 OS to handset makers in mid-2009, say sources — Microsoft is expected to start delivering its Windows Mobile 6.5 OS (operating system) to handset makers in mid-2009 following the expected debut of the new mobile OS in the upcoming Mobile World Congress …
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Mathew Honan / Wired News:
I Am Here: One Man's Experiment With the Location-Aware Lifestyle — I'm baffled by WhosHere. And I'm no newbie. I built my first Web page in 1994, wrote my first blog entry in 1999, and sent my first tweet in October 2006. My user number on Yahoo's event site, Upcoming.org: 14.
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Erin Biba / Wired News:
Inside the GPS Revolution: 10 Applications That Make the Most of Location
Inside the GPS Revolution: 10 Applications That Make the Most of Location
Discussion:
blogs.chron.com
Bloomberg:
Apple's Disclosures About Jobs's Health Said to Face SEC Review — Jan. 21 (Bloomberg) — U.S. regulators are examining Apple Inc.'s disclosures about Chief Executive Officer Steve Jobs's health problems to ensure investors weren't misled, a person familiar with the matter said.
Discussion:
Epicenter, Apple 2.0, Byte of the Apple, CNET News, MacRumors, Between the Lines, AppleInsider, Tech Central, VentureBeat, InformationWeek, PC World, The Register, Infinite Loop, Boy Genius Report, Reuters, paidContent.org, GPS Obsessed, Gawker, Gizmodo, CrunchGear, Business Week, GMSV, The Mac Observer, Tech Trader Daily, MacDailyNews and The Toybox
Michael Bloomberg / The Official Google Blog:
Explore New York City with Google — from your home, phone, and in person — [From time to time we invite guests to blog about initiatives of interest, and are very pleased to have Mayor Bloomberg join us here. - Ed.] — This is New York City: the ultimate destination and home to world-class hotels …
Discussion:
Search Engine Land, Screenwerk, Google LatLong, Kelsey Group Blogs, All Points Blog and Google Maps Mania
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Nathania Johnson / Search Engine Watch:
New York City and Google Team Up for New Information Center
New York City and Google Team Up for New Information Center
Discussion:
TechCrunch
Reuters:
Microsoft expected to cut jobs — NEW YORK/BOSTON (Reuters) - Microsoft Corp is expected to post a quarterly profit that misses its own target and announce thousands of job cuts this week as the global economic slump hurts even the technology industry's biggest players.
Kara Swisher / BoomTown:
Zimbra Founder Satish Dharmaraj to Depart Yahoo — Satish Dharmaraj-the founder of open-source email start-up Zimbra, which has been at the heart of significant new changes to Yahoo's key communications services-will be leaving the company. — The move, to be announced internally later today …
Michael Pinto / Fanboy.com:
Social Media “Experts” are the Cancer of Twitter (and Must Be Stopped) — Nearly a day goes by on Twitter without yet another social media “expert” choosing to stalk me. At first it started innocently — back in the day (about a year ago) various techie friends started …
Apple:
About the security content of QuickTime 7.6 — This document describes the security content of QuickTime 7.6, which can be downloaded and installed via Software Update preferences, or from Apple Downloads. — For the protection of our customers, Apple does not disclose, discuss …
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Nate Anderson / Ars Technica:
How Canadian ISPs throttle the Internet — Canada's Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission (CRTC) famously decided last year to allow Bell Canada to single out P2P traffic for bandwidth throttling between the hours of 4:30pm to 2am. But even as it allowed a practice …
Discussion:
DSLreports
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Erick Schonfeld / TechCrunch:
The Day Live Web Video Streaming Failed Us — Yesterday was supposed to be the day that live Web video streaming took on TV broadcasting. CNN.com alone served a record 21.3 million streams, with a peak of 1.3 million simultaneous streams. And Akamai reported a peak of 5.4 million …
The Official Google Blog:
Search findings from the U.S. presidential inauguration — Today, Barack Obama was sworn in as the 44th president of the United States of America. As we observed throughout the presidential campaign, many people in the U.S. turned to Google Search to find information.
The Boy Genius / Boy Genius Report:
The top 10 things we hate about the iPhone — Look, we love our iPhones as much as the person, but at this late point in the game, there are some things that are just inexcusable. Here's our top 10 things we hate about the iPhone, and we'll post up our top 10 things we hate about the Bold later on.
Santa Rosa Press-Democrat:
PANDORA ADS INVASIVE COMMERCIALS — Change has come to Pandora.com, the popular free music site that lets listeners craft radio stations to fit their tastes. — The site added 15-second commercial breaks to its streaming music service Tuesday as it continues to experiment with new ways to generate revenue.
Discussion:
Ars Technica, Gizmodo, Webware.com, TechCrunch, Communications …, Obsessable and Slashdot
Philip Elmer-DeWitt / Apple 2.0:
Apple Q1 2009 earnings smackdown — It's that time of year again. — After the markets close on Wednesday, Apple will report its earnings for fiscal 2009 Q1. And once again blogger Andy Zaky has challenged the professional analysts — most of whom, in his opinion, are clueless …
Charles / SiriusBuzz.com:
Sirius XM Rate Increase For March 11th CONFIRMED — For those of you who may have heard the news about the “potential” Sirius XM rate increase this afternoon, I can unequivocally confirm that this is in fact true. Customer support representatives are now confirming to the general public …
Tom Steinberg / mySociety:
Blimey. It looks like the Internets won — The vote on concealing MPs' expenses has been cancelled by the government! — In other words - we won! — This is a huge victory not just for transparency, it's a bellwether for a change in the way politics works.
Discussion:
TomsTechBlog.com
BBC:
Windows worm trickery for Vista — The Conficker virus has opened a new can of worms for security experts. — Drives such as USB sticks infected with the virus trick users into installing the worm, according to researchers. — The “Autoplay” function in Vista and early versions …
Jason Kincaid / TechCrunch:
OneSeason Raises $3.5 Million For Its Sports Stock Market — OneSeason, the stock market for sports that lets users invest real money into their favorite athletes, has closed a $3.5 million Series A funding round led by Charles River Ventures. To coincide with the funding …
Mary Jo Foley / All about Microsoft:
Windows PC users face dwindling retail options — I'm not shedding a whole lot of tears for Circuit City — except for one rather important service with which my local provided me. Once Circuit City liquidates in March, I'll have nowhere to go to kick Windows-PC tires before I buy them.
Discussion:
Computerworld
Nate Anderson / Ars Technica:
Ten years of futility: COPA finally, truly dead — COPA. 1998-2008. Requiescat in Pace. — The Child Online Protection Act, now a decade old, appears to be permanently, completely, and otherwise absolutely dead now that the Supreme Court has rejected Bush Administration pleas to consider reviving the law one more time.
Maggie Shiels / BBC:
Open government — The secret to a more secure and cost effective government is through open source technologies and products. — The claim comes from one of Silicon Valley's most respected business leaders Scott McNealy, a co-founder of Sun Microsystems.
David Hornik / VentureBlog:
Innovation Doesn't Take a Vacation in an Economic Downturn — By the end of 2008, Venture Capital had been officially declared dead. Startups were laying people off so fast that even TechCrunch couldn't manage to keep up. University Endowments and Foundations, the source of the “capital” …