Top Items:
Wall Street Journal:
Amazon to Announce New Kindle — Amazon.com Inc. is announcing a new version of its Kindle e-book reader on Monday. And, in a sign that the electronic book is gaining clout in the publishing world, Amazon is also expected to say it has acquired a new work by best-selling novelist Stephen King …
Discussion:
MediaMemo, Between the Lines, InformationWeek, Hardware 2.0, DailyTech, Silicon Alley Insider, Lifehacker, MediaFile, TeleRead, Scobleizer, Crave, Gizmodo, SlashGear, I4U News, CrunchGear, Gearlog and Engadget
RELATED:
Dana Blankenhorn / Open Source:
Time for Kindle to go open source — Amid all the hubbub over the launch of the new Amazon Kindle (at the Morgan Library in New York, 10 AM, be there and tell me what happened) two words are notably absent. — Open source. (Picture from Amazon via C|Net.)
beyond 140 for @lewmoorman:
Google's First Real Threat? Twitter. — As Google's search share approaches 85%, there is constant debate over who could possibly challenge them. Some mighty forces (e.g. Ballmer, Wales, Diller) have aligned against them, but the lead just keeps growing. — I have seen the threat.
RELATED:
John Borthwick / Silicon Alley Insider:
Google Next Victim Of Creative Destruction? (GOOG)
Google Next Victim Of Creative Destruction? (GOOG)
Discussion:
BoomTown, Search Engine Land, The Equity Kicker, HipMojo.com and Howard Lindzon, Thanks:atul
The Boy Genius / Boy Genius Report:
BlackBerry Gemini 9300 information, specs — First there was “Pluto,” then were was “Magnum,” but now we're talkin' about something totally different — Gemini. What's Gemini you ask? From what we've been told, the working model number is 9300, so that's BlackBerry 9300.
Arn / MacRumors:
Apple to Integrate ‘QuickTime Pro’ Features into Snow Leopard? — The latest Mac OS X 10.6 Snow Leopard seeds suggest that Apple may be eliminating the ‘QuickTime Pro’ upgrade that is currently offered as a $29.99 upgrade to Mac users. — Apple has long reserved several additional features …
Eric Krangel / Silicon Alley Insider:
Microsoft's Price For New Windows Mobile Backup: Free (MSFT) — Not a huge surprise: Microsoft (MSFT), whose Windows Mobile operatring system has been lagging compared to offerings from Apple (AAPL), Research in Motion (RIMM), and now Google (GOOG) as well, is set to introduce its own “app store” for Windows Mobile phones.
Discussion:
AppleInsider
RELATED:
Nick Wingfield / Wall Street Journal:
Microsoft to Bolster Cellphone Strategy
Microsoft to Bolster Cellphone Strategy
Discussion:
Phone Scoop
Gregg Keizer / Computerworld:
Mac clone maker wins legal round against Apple — Psystar can argue Apple abused copyright laws, judge rules — Computerworld) A federal judge last week ruled that Psystar Corp. can continue its countersuit against Apple Inc., giving the Mac clone maker a rare win in its seven-month-old battle with Apple.
Jason Kincaid / TechCrunch:
Wake Up Call: Facebook Isn't A Safe Haven — Facebook just turned 5 years old. But a week that should have been filled with reflection and good times was instead marred by a series of breaking news reports detailing sex scandals, phishing, and other malicious activity on the world's largest social network.
Luigi Lugmayr / I4U News:
Samsung TouchWiz 3D UI gets Update for MWC 2009 — The Samsung TouchWiz smartphone UI runs for instance on the rather successful Samsung Omnia phone and according to Samsung TouchWiz is used already by 1 million users. Today Samsung announced an update of the Touchwiz UI to debut at the Mobile World Congress 2009 next week.
Leslie Cauley / USA Today:
Google's G1 phone makes it easy to track surfing habits — The new Google phone, dubbed the G1, has been touted as a working man's smartphone — a cheap, Web-friendly wireless device that can make life easier for millions of consumers. — The G1, as it turns out, also stands to make life …
Sarah Perez / ReadWriteWeb:
The iPhone Becomes a Web Server — When those Apple advertisements tout “there's an app for just about anything,” they aren't kidding. The latest example? A new iPhone application which just debuted in Japan's App Store transforms the handheld into a full-blown web server.
Thanks:dreamsketcher
Julian Sanchez / Ars Technica:
Broadband spending trimmed in stimulus compromise — The Senate's compromise cuts $2 billion from spending on broadband deployment as legislators wrangle over who will control the remaining funds. — Spending cuts are the theme of the Senate's compromise draft of legislation meant to inject cash into a flagging economy.
Discussion:
BroadbandCensus.com Blog
Matthew Karnitschnig / Wall Street Journal:
Sirius XM Got, and Rebuffed, Bid — Satellite Mogul Ergen Offered to Inject Capital for Firm to Use in Paying Debt — Satellite mogul Charles Ergen made an unsolicited offer late last year to take control of Sirius XM Radio Inc., and was rebuffed, according to people familiar with the situation.
Michael Masnick / Techdirt:
Ruckus Music Service — Which Was Supposed To Save The Industry — Now Dead — Remember Ruckus? That was the attempt by a former recording industry guy and a former Napster employee to create an online music service that colleges would pay for, but which students could use for “free” …
Douglas MacMillan / Business Week:
Best Buy, Other Retailers Tap Tech to Boost Sales — Retailers are using analytics, a new breed of tracking software, to exploit how customers behave — As the financial meltdown spiraled in September, spending habits changed quickly. Many consumers stopped spending altogether.
Joe Wilcox / Microsoft Watch:
Mozilla to Europe: Handcuff Microsoft — Friday's blog post by Mitchell Baker, Mozilla Foundation chairperson, puts Microsoft on notice. Nothing is forgiven. These days, Microsoft is fast to make sure most of its Websites and services are quickly, if not immediately, compatible with Firefox.
Discussion:
Financial Times