Top Items:
Andy Palay / Gmail Blog:
New in Labs: Offline Gmail — Web-based email is great because you can check it from any computer, but there's one little catch: it's inherently limited by your internet connection. From public WiFi to smartphones equipped with 3G, from mobile broadband cards to fledgling in-flight wireless on airplanes …
Discussion:
Google Enterprise Blog, Google Operating System, Andy Beal's Marketing Pilgrim, Network World, Geek.com, Software as Services, Regular Geek, TECH.BLORGE.com, ReadWriteWeb, Gizmodo, GottaBeMobile.com, Newlaunches.com, WebWorkerDaily, Lifehacker, Electricpig.co.uk, Between the Lines, TechSpot, eWeek, Technologizer, BetaNews, PC World, Zef.me, Zoho Blogs, TechBays, Mashable!, TheNextWeb.com, jkOnTheRun, Neowin.net and Slashdot
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Stephen Shankland / Webware.com:
Gmail grows up with offline e-mail access — Significantly increasing the utility and competitiveness of its Web-based e-mail service, Google is enabling an experimental ability to read, write, and search Gmail messages even while not connected to the network.
Kelly Fiveash / The Register:
Gmail goes offline to avoid flatline online — Google goes back to the future with PC-based Office — Google has finally added offline support to Gmail, allowing US and Blighty-based users to read and write email while unconnected to the interwebs. — The firm said it was rolling out an …
Discussion:
Network World
Larry Dignan / Between the Lines:
AT&T: 1.9 million iPhones activated — AT&T said Wednesday that it activated 1.9 million iPhone 3Gs in the fourth quarter with 40 percent of those activations representing new customers. — In the back half of 2008, AT&T activated more than 4.3 million iPhones (statement).
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Business Wire:
AT&T Reports Fourth-Quarter and Full-Year Results Highlighted by Robust Wireless Data Growth, Accelerated U-verse TV Ramp, Continued Double-Digit Growth in IP Data Services — Full-year reported EPS of $2.16, up from $1.94 for 2007; full-year adjusted EPS of $2.81, compared with $2.76 …
Discussion:
Tech Trader Daily
Michael Arrington / TechCrunch:
Some Things Need To Change — Yesterday as I was leaving the DLD Conference in Munich, Germany someone walked up to me and quite deliberately spat in my face. Before I even understood what was happening, he veered off into the crowd, just another dark head in a dark suit.
Amy-Mae Elliott / Pocket-lint.co.uk:
Acer smartphone launch confirmed … “Are you ready to join Acer's launch into the world of mobile communications?” — So asks an invite that's just dropped into Pocket-lint's inbox this morning, confirming rumours the company are to launch a smartphone. — Due to be unveiled on February 16 …
Discussion:
wmpoweruser.com, Boy Genius Report, Engadget, Gizmodo, SlashGear, Electronista, I4U News and Phone Scoop
Roberto Baldwin / Mac|Life all:
iPhoto's Faces Recognizes Cats — A huge disappointment for pet owners, was word that iPhoto's newest feature, Faces, wouldn't recognize animals according to Apple employees on the show floor. We even did a few tests at Macworld Expo with images they had of the dog Luce.
Discussion:
Webomatica, TUAW, Boing Boing Gadgets, Zef.me, Gizmodo, TheNextWeb.com, The Raw Feed and ParisLemon
Markcuban / blog maverick:
The Great Internet Video Lie — Internet Video. Its the salvation for content creators everywhere. Its the end to dependence on the big bad meanies, the cable and satellite companies. Right ? Hell no. The concept that “over the top” video creates a valid business alternative …
Nick Summers / Newsweek:
What Would Google Do? — According to author Jeff Jarvis, taking a page out of the company's playbook could put the economy back on track. … “Google is an avalanche and it has only just begun to tumble down the mountain,” Jeff Jarvis writes in a new book called “What Would Google Do?” …
Erica Sadun / Ars Technica:
Android app uproar sparks debate over open app store model — An Android Marketplace application has been accused of attacking files. Ars looks at the matter and concludes that there may be more smoke than fire in this case. — An Android Market application has become the center …
Dean Takahashi / VentureBeat:
Will Intel let Jen-Hsun Huang spread graphics beyond PCs? — Nvidia chief executive Jen-Hsun Huang is on a missoni to get graphics chips into everything from handheld computers to smart phones. In a dinner with reporters on Monday night, the head of the Santa Clara, Calif.-based graphics chip maker …
Jason Kincaid / TechCrunch:
Boobs And Booty Banned From The App Store — Breasts and the iPhone have had a tumultuous relationship. Last month, an application that allowed users to shake a pair (possibly NSFW) of 3D breasts was banned from the App Store for being apparently too risque for its audience.
Josh Lowensohn / Webware.com:
Which HD video Web service is the best? — Around this time last year we put together a comparison of various video sites to determine which ones had the best overall quality and user experience. Since then, high-definition-capable digital cameras and camcorders have taken off …
Todd Bishop / TechFlash:
Florida firm stakes out Microsoft, offering jobs to worried workers — At the Automated HealthCare Solutions offices in Florida last Thursday morning, chief operating officer Donnie Reynolds was talking with fellow executive Veer Hossain about their hiring needs.
Matt Buchanan / Gizmodo:
T-Mobile BlackBerry Curve 8900 First Impressions — After the BlackBerry Bold's epically delayed launch on AT&T and the Storm's epically borked launch everywhere, RIM needs 2009 to be better than 2008. The T-Mobile BlackBerry Curve 8900 is a good way to start.
Discussion:
Crave
Tameka Kee / paidContent.org:
Search Ad Firm WordStream Gets $4 Million First Round; New CEO — WordStream has picked up $4 million in a first round of financing led by Sigma Partners; the investment also comes with a new President and CEO, Rob Adler. Adler previously served as co-founder and president of CCBN …
Discussion:
VentureBeat
Claire Cain Miller / Bits:
Maybe We Should Call Them Venture Pessimists — Venture capitalists need a healthy dose of optimism to do their jobs — betting millions of dollars on young ideas and hoping they turn in to the next big thing. — These days, though, that optimism is in short supply.
Discussion:
Industry Standard
PR Newswire:
Revenues — Full-year 2008 U.S. GAAP software and software-related service revenues were euro 8.46 billion (2007: euro 7.43 billion), representing an increase of 14% compared to 2007. Non-GAAP software and software-related service revenues, which exclude a non-recurring deferred support revenue write …
Michael Arrington / TechCrunch:
Online Health Consolidation Continues: HealthCentral Buys Wellsphere — Three months ago Steve Case's Revolution Health sold for $100 million or so to Waterfront Media (after raising $200 million in venture capital). Consolidation continues today with the HealthCentral acquisition of Wellsphere, which we first covered in early 2007.
Nate Anderson / Ars Technica:
2006 AOL search data snafu spawns “I Love Alaska” short films — Who knew that AOL search logs would prove such a muse to artists? Two Dutch filmmakers follow the odd search engine entries of user 711391 as she tries to find love, escape from Houston, and kill those annoying birds in her yard.
Discussion:
minimovies.stage.submarine.nl
Peter Svensson / Associated Press:
Cox to test new way to handle Internet congestion — NEW YORK (AP) — Cox Communications, the third-largest cable company in the U.S., stepped on to battleground of the “Net Neutrality” issue Tuesday, saying it will be trying out a new way to keep its subscribers' Internet traffic from jamming up.
BBC:
UK will not legislate on piracy — The UK's Intellectual Property minister David Lammy has said the government will not force internet service providers to pursue file sharers. — There had been mounting speculation about government legislation on the issue as the music industry steps up its fight against the pirates.
Discussion:
bit-tech.net
Dan Moren / Macworld:
iPhone push notifications: dead and buried, or waiting in the wings? — Apple's no stranger to missing a deadline or two, nor is the company averse to pushing back products a few weeks or months when they need more time. But less common are products that disappear entirely into the world-devouring maw …
Discussion:
Macworld
Jason Kincaid / TechCrunch:
Report: Click Fraud At Record High — 17.1% of all clickthroughs on web advertising are the result of click fraud - the act of clicking on a web ad to artificially increase its click-through rate - according to the latest report from Click Forensics, a company that specializes in monitoring and preventing internet crime.
Discussion:
Business 2.0 Press
Yahoo! Search Marketing Blog:
The Truth about Account Optimizations — This program helps small advertisers improve performance issues in their accounts — When we emailed notification about our updated Terms and Conditions to Sponsored Search advertisers on January 5, it caused some of our blogger friends to notice …
Steven Musil / CNET News:
Movie channel to go live on Web before TV debut — A premium movie channel backed by a trio of studios is expected to debut as an on-demand Web site months before its traditional TV launch. — The consortium of MGM, Paramount Pictures, and Lions Gate announced Tuesday at the NATPE television conference …