Top Items:
Philip Elmer-DeWitt / Apple 2.0:
Apple starts 2009 with strong Net gains — Apple (AAPL) consolidated its 2008 holiday Internet market-share gains with strong performances from the Mac, iPhone and iPod touch in January, according to preliminary data issued overnight Sunday by Net Applications.
Discussion:
Edible Apple, AppleInsider, CNET News, 9 to 5 Mac, marketshare.hitslink.com and Asa Dotzler
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Joe Wilcox / Apple Watch:
Mac Share Gains Aren't Believable — I assert this after seeing several reports, including Apple 2.0 blog, touting Mac share gains. — GOT A TIP OR RUMOR? — “Mac's share grew another 3.12 percent in January to grab a record 9.93 percent of Internet traffic.
Discussion:
LiveSide
Dan Goodin / The Register:
Passport RFIDs cloned wholesale by $250 eBay auction spree — Video demo shows you how — Using inexpensive off-the-shelf components, an information security expert has built a mobile platform that can clone large numbers of the unique electronic identifiers used in US passport cards and next generation drivers licenses.
Discussion:
Engadget
Nick O'Neill / All Facebook:
Facebook (NOT) Rolling Out New Product Research Service (Updated) — According to the Telegraph, Facebook announced at Davos that it will be rolling out a new service to provide real-time research for companies looking to test “the appeal of new products. Companies will be able to pose questions …
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Jonathanhstrauss / SnowBlog:
Suggest to Techmeme Button — Techmeme is an essential news discovery tool for me. It replaced my RSS reader and the totally unmanageable list of blog feeds that came with it years ago, and now I'd estimate that at least 95% of the news I consume is discovered via Techmeme or Twitter.
Ernesto / TorrentFreak:
EU Plots Pirate Bay Ban and Piracy Clampdown — The proposals in the report, drafted by the 73 year old Spanish socialist Manuel Medina Ortega, show many similarities to the wish lists of the RIAA, IFPI and MPAA we published earlier. The report calls for more responsibility and liability for ISPs …
Verne Kopytoff / San Francisco Chronicle:
Twitter improves service, base; next, revenue — (02-01) 15:13 PST — Greg Sterling, a technology analyst, used to ridicule Twitter and the deluge of messages its users posted about eating hamburgers and running errands. — “It just seemed to me to be a glorification of trivia and navel gazing,” he said.
John Cook / TechFlash:
Saint Valentino helps lovers find that special gift for February 14 — The laid off techies who dreamed up the innovative IamSaintNick.com service are back in business with a new idea just in time for Valentine's Day. It's called IamSaintValentino.com. And if you are struggling to come …
Discussion:
Brier Dudley's blog
Chris Nicholson / New York Times:
Bringing the Internet to Remote African Villages — ENTASOPIA, Kenya — The road from Nairobi winds 100 miles to this town deep in Masai country. The asphalt gives way to sand and dust, until finally it is just a dirt track climbing over broken hills and plunging back to desert flats.
Steve Gillmor / TechCrunchIT:
Twitter comes clean — Twitter developer manager Alex Payne has updated the Twitter FAQ with the actual, real, honest story on the return of Track to its users. First, the relevant text: … Now, the translation: … FriendFeed co-founder Bret Taylor appeared on NewsGang Live Friday …
Discussion:
The Gillmor Gang
Om Malik / GigaOM:
By 2012 Koreans Will Get 1Gbps Broadband Connections — The Korea Communications Commission is working on plans that will boost broadband speeds in that country tenfold by the end of 2012. That means Koreans will access 1 Gbps service by 2012. That's 200 times as fast …
Erick Schonfeld / TechCrunch:
Hulu's Super Bowl Ad Comes With An Ad — The Super Bowl is perhaps the one television event where people actually look forward to the ads because so much effort is put into each one. And every year, there are a handful of standouts. You can watch the ads plenty of places online, including on Hulu.
Ben Kuchera / Ars Technica:
Playing video games linked to breast-feeding, not crime — The media, hungry for stories, is way too quick to link gaming with violent crimes. But the data indicates that, if anything, the opposite is true: crime has gone down during the recent explosion in video games.