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Google Investor Relations:
Google Announces Fourth Quarter And Fiscal Year 2008 Results — Google Inc. (NASDAQ: GOOG) today announced financial results for the quarter and for the fiscal year ended December 31, 2008. — “Google performed well in the fourth quarter, despite an increasingly difficult economic environment.
Discussion:
BUZZ NEWSROOM, Reuters, Search Engine Roundtable, MediaMemo, I4U News, Microsoft Watch, mocoNews.net, Neowin.net, InformationWeek, paidContent, Silicon Alley Insider, GigaOM, eWeek, Data Center Knowledge, paidContent.org, Tech Trader Daily, VentureBeat, GPS Obsessed, Tech Central, Search Engine Journal, Tech Beat, BloggingStocks, Industry Standard, Search Engine Land, MarketWatch, Traffick and Between the Lines
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Eric Eldon / VentureBeat:
FeedBurner is too broken for its biggest fan — Before Jason Shellen left Google and started Plinky (which launched earlier today), he helped develop products like Blogger and Reader — and he was the one who did the due diligence for Google before it bought FeedBurner for $100 million back in 2007.
RELATED:
Michael Arrington / TechCrunch:
Feedburner Needs To Get It Together — Complaints about Feedburner, a service that helps websites manage their RSS feeds, have been around as long as the company itself. But you'd think that when Google spent $100 million to buy the company, they'd get it together. — But things haven't gotten better.
Steve Lacey / Random Thoughts:
the end of an era - flight sim is no more — It really does appear that Microsoft has shutdown the ACES game studio and axed the entire staff. A lot of my friends are now looking for something else to do... Microsoft Flight Simulator is dead. … It started unfolding earlier today …
dailymobile.se:
Nokia E75 QWERTY - High Quality Pictures — Here are some new pictures of the Nokia E75. The Nokia E75 has a back cover with a metallic mirror feel along with a 2.4 inch screen, 3.2 megapixel camera, QWERTY Keyboard, Dual keypads, HDSPA, and WiFi. Enjoy — [ Thx Cre_Rec ]
Don Reisinger / The Digital Home:
Why I can't get enough of Windows 7 — Anyone who reads The Digital Home knows that I have issues with Windows Vista. I think it's a sub-par operating system with too many quirks and far too many flaws to make it worth using. I only use Vista when I have to. — So I entered into the world of Windows 7 with some trepidation.
Michael Arrington / TechCrunch:
Google Puts The Squeeze On Free Apps — Google says the vast majority of the 1 million businesses that use Google Apps opt for the free advertising supported version. To make the free option less attractive they've been quietly lowering the number of user accounts that can be associated with a free account.
Discussion:
Epicenter
Danny Sullivan / Search Engine Land:
Yahoo: Obama Is A “Miserable Failure” — I told you so. Or I told anyone who cared. I even tried to reach the Obama administration in four or five different ways. Do a search on Yahoo right now for miserable failure, and you'll find President Barack Obama's page ranking either in the top spot or the second spot.
John Paczkowski / Digital Daily:
Palm to Apple: Bring It … Though Apple COO Tim Cook didn't mention any companies by name in his recent warning to those who would take liberties with Apple's (AAPL) intellectual property, it was clear to whom he was referring: Palm (PALM). — Palm, whose new Pre handset …
Rafe Needleman / Webware.com:
The spreadsheet of sunshine: Who's hiring (updated) — The story I kicked off in late October, Tech layoffs: The scorecard, is a real bummer. On it, we're tracking the current layoffs in the tech economy. I hate the story, since each line on the sheet stands for real people who have lost jobs.
James Urquhart / CNET News:
Is Google App Engine successful? — The original title of this post was going to be “Why isn't Google App Engine successful?” You see, I've been frustrated of late at the lack of followup press about the PaaS offering since Google's announcement about it last April.
John Markoff / New York Times:
Worm Infects Millions of Computers Worldwide — A new digital plague has hit the Internet, infecting millions of personal and business computers in what seems to be the first step of a multistage attack. The world's leading computer security experts do not yet know who programmed the infection, or what the next stage will be.
Forbes:
Europe's Innovation Lag — R&D investment isn't what it should be on the continent. — The European Union still lags behind the U.S. in innovation and is further away from its goal of becoming the world's leading knowledge-based economy, said a new report released Thursday.
Laszlo Bock / The Official Google Blog:
Announcing Google's Employee Option Exchange Program — Today we announced our plans to do something more for the people who are responsible for Google's success — our employees. Recognizing that about 85% of our employees have at least some stock options that are underwater (i.e. …
Discussion:
Digits, The Register, Silicon Alley Insider, TG Daily, VentureBeat and L.A. Times Tech Blog
Elizabeth Woyke / Forbes:
America's Most Wired Cities — Seattle takes the lead in our annual list of the most broadband-connected U.S. cities. — Move over, Atlanta. Seattle, Microsoft and Amazon.com's home base, is now the country's most wired city. — While these marquee names have long lent the Emerald City tech-y cachet …
PC Pro:
Q&A: Microsoft defends return to DRM — Microsoft yesterday unveiled its MSN Mobile Music service - and a surprise return to digital rights management (DRM). — While companies such as Apple and Amazon have finally moved to music download services free of copy protection …
Ben Blanchard / Reuters:
China says Internet crackdown to be “long-lasting” — BEIJING (Reuters) - China sought on Friday to portray its Internet crackdown as a campaign to protect youth from filth and nothing to do with stifling political dissent, with an official promising long-lasting action against “vulgarity.”
Michael Arrington / TechCrunch:
Superstar Team To Launch Flash MMOG Called Ohai — New startup Ohai has been getting big cocktail party buzz over the last few months. The company won't disclose much about what they're doing, except that they're building a Flash-based massively multiplayer online game (MMOG).
Discussion:
VentureBeat
Amol Sharma / Wall Street Journal:
Verizon Web Phone Targets Home Users — Verizon Communications Inc. will market a snazzy Internet phone that works with any high-speed Internet service. — The new home phone, called the Hub, aims to retain existing landline customers and attract other carriers' customers, the company said.
Jim Goldman / Tech Check with Jim Goldman:
Bartz Gets Millions; Yahoo Bails on Pay Increases for Rank and File — For the first time in its history, Yahoo [YHOO Loading... () ] has suspended scheduled pay increases for the company's rank and file, even as it signs up new CEO Carol Bartz with a pay package that some say could be worth …
Discussion:
Susan Mernit's Blog
Simon Sage / IntoMobile:
Screenshots of Android's Cupcake Update in Action, Still Not Ready for Public — So after shoveling through T-Mobile (NYSE: DT)'s thread on what the deal is with the Android Cupcake update, I finally got a straight answer. … The short version? The Cupcake development branch …
Discussion:
Google Android News …, Gadget Lab, Android Phone Fans, Gizmodo, Engadget, Arron La, Android Tapp and AndroidGuys
Michael Arrington / TechCrunch:
Facebook Now Nearly Twice The Size Of MySpace Worldwide — In November 2008 Facebook drew 200 million unique worldwide visitors; more than 1 in 5 people who accessed the Internet that month visited the site. When sites are that big growth generally stagnates, but in Facebook's case it's still skyrocketing.
Andrew Sinkov / Evernote Blog:
Welcome You Fine Google Notebook Users — Recently, Google announced that they were stopping development on Google Notebook. We're big fans of Google Notebook, in fact many of used it before Evernote came along. When we heard the news, we immediately began work on a Google Notebook import tool.
Richard Waters / Financial Times:
Sony has lost what made it special — In the glory days of the 1970s and 1980s, Sony's Inazawa factory made cathode ray tubes and sent them down the road to Ichinomiya, where they were used in Trinitron televisions and exported. — After Sony announced an unexpectedly large operating loss …
Bob Heyman / Search Engine Land:
Tube Mogul Buys Video Analytics Firm — In this period of doom and gloom, its rare to see a small company being bold enough to make an acquisition. But that's just what TubeMogul, which operates the web's most popular online video syndication and tracking service, has done.
Discussion:
MarketingVOX
InfoWorld:
Samsung records Q4 loss, annual profit slumps — South Korea's Samsung Electronics recorded a net loss for the last three months of 2008, while its net profit for the entire year fell 26 percent, it said Friday. — The company's net loss for the last three months of 2008 was 22 billion won …
Dan Moren / Macworld:
Opinion: 99-cent apps a steal, but who's really being robbed? — The App Store has been a battleground for much of the six months that it's been in existence, even as that battle has been fought on shifting terrain, covering the restrictive NDA and the mysterious approval process.
Dan Primack / PE Hub Blog:
Brad Garlinghouse's Next Act — When we last heard from Brad Garlinghouse, he was stepping down as Yahoo's senior VP in charge of such massive properties as Mail, Messenger, Groups and Flickr. That was around six months ago - 20 months after his infamous memo - and it seems that he's finally working on a new project.
Discussion:
Jobwire