Top Items:
Michael Arrington / TechCrunch:
Twitter Raising New Cash At $250 Million Valuation — Twitter, which just recently turned down a half billion dollar acquisition offer from Facebook (albeit to be paid mostly with Facebook stock), is dipping back into the venture capital market, we've heard from a source with knowledge of the deal.
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Ashkan Karbasfrooshan / HipMojo.com:
Twitter is 2009's Facebook, With Less Upside — Twitter is making the same mistakes Facebook did, which are: — raising money instead of generating any, — letting the valuation get ahead of realistic business prospects which will make any M&A nearly impossible,
Peter Kafka / MediaMemo:
No Revenue? No Problem. More Money For Twitter On The Way — Remember the good old days of Bubble 2.0? When a webby company with no real business plan could raise piles of money at an eye-popping valuation? — That would have been par for the course as recently as a year ago …
Discussion:
Silicon Alley Insider
Robert Darnton / New York Review of Books:
Google & the Future of Books — How can we navigate through the information landscape that is only beginning to come into view? The question is more urgent than ever following the recent settlement between Google and the authors and publishers who were suing it for alleged breach of copyright.
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Tim O'Reilly / O'Reilly Radar:
Competition in the eBook Market — There's been a lot of buzz on forward-looking publisher mailing lists in the past few days about Robert Darnton's piece in the New York Review of Books, Google and the Future of Books. When it hit techmeme today, I thought it might be appropriate to share …
Robert Scoble / Scobleizer:
Facebook screws iFart author — You couldn't make this stuff up if you tried. — OK, I'm on the phone with Joel Comm right now. He's been doing business online since 1995. He's the co-creator of Yahoo Games. He wrote the Adsense Code, which got onto New York Times best selling list.
Richard Waters / Financial Times:
Cash-rich US techs guard purse strings — The biggest US technology companies may have a surfeit of cash but leading industry executives have dashed hopes that they will use those resources to return money to shareholders or step up acquisitions in the downturn.
Discussion:
Clickety Clack
Luke Hutchison:
Zoom-Zoom-Zoom — Get Multi-Touch Zooming Support on your T-Mobile G1 TODAY — I posted recently to show that working multi-touch input is available on the T-Mobile G1 phone. Now the necessary changes to the Android software stack are finally in good shape, and the software is easily installable on your own phone.
Jesus Diaz / Gizmodo:
iPhone Bluetooth File Transfer Coming Soon (YES!) — Trust the rogue programmers and Cydia—the independent equivalent to the iTunes App Store—to bring you one of the most awaited features ever for the iPhone: Bluetooth file transfer. — As you can see in the video, iBluetooth will bring you just that …
Leslie Berlin / New York Times:
Cellphones as Credit Cards? Americans Must Wait — A wave of a cellphone replaces the swipe of a credit card in a pilot program involving MasterCard PayPass, right. At left, a phone is used to pay for items at a Tokyo candy stand. Account information can be embedded in the phone.
David Smith / Guardian:
Websites ‘must be saved for history’ — Historians face a “black hole” of lost material unless urgent action is taken to preserve websites and other digital records, the head of the British Library has warned. — Just as families store digital photos on computers which might never be passed …
Chris Gampat / Geek.com:
Android app destroying G1 users' memory? — A new app called MemoryUp Personal appears to be responsible for the destruction of many G1 users' memory, as stated in the comments about the app in Android's App Market. The app, created by Peter Liu, is being called a “scam” by users in the App Market.
Discussion:
Gizmodo