Top Items:
Charles Cooper / Coop's Corner:
It was 20 years ago today: The Web — History in the making: Berners-Lee's original schematic for a client/server model for a distributed hypertext system. — Is it already 20 years since Tim Berners-Lee authored “Information Management: A proposal” and set the technology world on fire?
Discussion:
CNET News, Between the Lines, Technologizer, dailywireless.org and Imaging Insider, Thanks:mrinaldesai
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Marshall Kirkpatrick / ReadWriteWeb:
Happy 20th Birthday, World Wide Web — On March 13th, 2009 the World Wide Web will turn 20 years old. Sir Tim Berners-Lee invented this world-changing layer on top of the Internet on this day in 1989. It's hard to overstate the impact this young technology has had already and it's …
Discussion:
pluGGd.in
Michael Masnick / Techdirt:
How Not To ‘Save’ The Music Industry: Ask The Folks Who Benefited From Old Inefficiencies — There's a group in the UK called “MusicTank,” which is supposed to represent something of a “think tank” around the music industry. It was the head of MusicTank, back at Midem, who “joked” …
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Robert Andrews / paidContent:
Why YouTube's PRS Spat Is Just One Battle In The Coming Online Music War
Why YouTube's PRS Spat Is Just One Battle In The Coming Online Music War
Discussion:
Music Ally
Engineering Windows 7:
A few more changes from Beta to RC... Hey folks, just wanted to provide another update (building on the recent post on some changes since Beta) on some of the changes you will see in the Release Candidate. Again, there are many and this is not an exhaustive list.
David Wood / Symbian Foundation Blog:
Introducing the Release Plan — There's a lot of activity underway, throughout the software development teams for all the different packages that make up the Symbian Platform. — These packages are finding their way into platform releases. The plan is that there will be two platform releases each year.
Discussion:
Gadgetell, Boy Genius Report, Electronista, InformationWeek, Unwired View, Phone Scoop, All About Symbian and MobileBurn.com
Larry Dignan / Between the Lines:
Cisco's expected Unified Computing System splash raises a data center ruckus — Cisco Systems on Monday is widely expected to launch network servers in a move that will put it in the virtualization business and potentially at odds with players like Hewlett-Packard and IBM.
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Danny Sullivan / Search Engine Land:
How We Search With The Twitter “Help Engine” — Is Twitter a search engine or not? There's been plenty of discussion and debate about this recently. I'd say yes, in a way. It's clear to anyone who watches a twitterstream that people put out questions to Twitter similar to how they use search engines.
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Heather Hopkins / Hitwise Intelligence:
Where to From Twitter — Is Twitter, as Eric Schmidt opined …
Where to From Twitter — Is Twitter, as Eric Schmidt opined …
Discussion:
the Econsultancy blog, InformationWeek, Twitterrati, SiliconAngle, Beyond Search, ReadWriteWeb, Search Engine Land and Micro Persuasion, Thanks:atul
Kara Swisher / BoomTown:
New AOL Chairman and CEO-and About-To-Be-Ex-Googler-Tim Armstrong Speaks! — For a tall man, Tim Armstrong has been on an awful lot of online companies' short lists. — For a big Web exec job, that is. Indeed, whenever one opens up in the Internet space, the 6-foot 3-inch Google ad sales …
Discussion:
Between the Lines, Washington Post, Epicenter, eWeek, DSLreports, Silicon Alley Insider, John Battelle's Searchblog, Andy Beal's Marketing Pilgrim, MediaMemo, Business Week, the Econsultancy blog, The Equity Kicker, GigaOM, The Register, AppScout, TimeWarner, paidContent.org, MediaFile, VentureBeat, CNET News, Jobwire, Contentinople, TechCrunch, Search Engine Land and digg.com
Michael Arrington / TechCrunch:
Facebook Getting Serious About Vanity URLs — Facebook is getting wise to something MySpace has known from the start - users love vanity URLs. When you tell someone your MySpace page, you just say myspace.com/[user/brand/band/ etc.] (I'm myspace.com/mikearrington). On Facebook it has always been more difficult.
Jacqui Cheng / Ars Technica:
iPod touch—not lies—sets kid's pants on fire; parents sue — “Liar liar, pants on fire!” One kid from Cincinnati won't be able to listen to that one again after allegedly having an iPod touch actually set his pants on fire, resulting in melted underwear and second degree burns on his leg.
Anupreeta Das / Reuters:
TDS under pressure to find big U.S. telecom buyer — NEW YORK (Reuters) - U.S. regional phone company Telephone & Data Systems Inc (TDS.N) could face pressure to sell itself to bigger rivals, which have been eroding the company's market share and outpacing it technologically.
MG Siegler / VentureBeat:
Fire Eagle perches on Facebook — Despite the hype they get, location-based services have yet to catch on in the mainstream. The problem so far is that most of the social networks that use location are relatively small — at least, compared to something like Facebook, which is nearing 200 million users.
Mobile Today:
O2 drops price on 3G iPhone ahead of new Apple device this summer — Stocks cleared as new Apple iPhone set for July release — O2 is poised to tweak prices on the 3G iPhone in May, ahead of what is believed to be a new Apple mobile phone in June or, most likely, July, Mobile can exclusively reveal.
Discussion:
Ars Technica, FierceWireless, Wall Street Journal, O'Grady's PowerPage, Music Ally, mocoNews and Boy Genius Report
Hiawatha Bray / Boston Globe:
MagicJack far from enchanting — You've probably seen the ads on TV, especially if you're up late. Plug a little device called magicJack into a PC, then connect your telephone, and get unlimited calls throughout the United States for $20 a year. — To me, there was a whiff of sleaze about the whole thing.
Discussion:
Nieman Journalism Lab
Leena Rao / TechCrunch:
FanSnap Is The New Kayak For Event Ticket Searches — Event tickets are a big business and startup FanSnap is entering the game with a compelling ticket search engine. FanSnap is launching the public beta of its nifty Kayak-like live ticket search engine for sports, concerts, and theater events.
Jenna Wortham / Bits:
Foursquare Seeks to Turn Nightlife Into a Game — Dennis Crowley's last big project, a location-based messaging service called Dodgeball, was just shut down by its owner, Google. — But Mr. Crowley got back in the game Friday with Foursquare, a free mobile application that aims to turn nightlife …
Economist:
An idea whose time has come — Entrepreneurialism has become cool — VICTOR HUGO once remarked: “You can resist an invading army; you cannot resist an idea whose time has come.” Today entrepreneurship is such an idea. — The triumph of entrepreneurship is driven by profound technological change.
Thanks:mrinaldesai
Eric Krangel / Silicon Alley Insider:
TheStreet.com CEO Out — Shakeup at financial news site Thestreet.com (TSCM), founded by Jim Cramer. CEO Thomas J. Clarke Jr is leaving the company after over 9 years on the job. — No word yet on a successor — director Daryl Otte will oversee the search for a new boss.
Sascha Segan / PC Magazine:
New Carrier Promises Unlimited 3G Data, VOIP — A brand-new mobile-phone carrier, Zer01 Mobile said Thursday that it can give you truly unlimited voice and data on smart phones for $69.95/month, without a contract, on a network as broad as the one owned by AT&T. — That's because, in many ways, the network is AT&T's.
Chris Albrecht / NewTeeVee:
Where to Watch March Madness Online (and on Mobile and On-Demand) — Let's be honest. This is the most wonderful time of the year. March Madness, baby! The NCAA Men's College Basketball Tournament is back! — Once you've filled out your bracket and given $5 to the office pool, all that's left to do is watch the games.
Michael Arrington / TechCrunch:
StumbleUpon To Launch su.pr ShortUrl Service — StumbleUpon is preparing to launch a shortURL service (a web service that provides short aliases for redirection of long URLs, like TinyURL or Bit.ly) in the next couple of weeks called su.pr. — Founder Garret Camp announced the new service …
Jason Fitzpatrick / Lifehacker:
JPEGSnoop Sniffs Out Signs of Editing — Windows only: JPEGSnoop is a small and portable application that sleuths through images determine if the image has been altered or edited. — JPEGSnoop starts by reading a JPEG/JPG file's EXIF data to give you a wealth of information about the photo …
Nicholas Carlson / The Biz:
The Arrogance Of Newspapers Is Astonishing — In an article in today's New York Times, Richard Pérez-Peña tries to imagine a world without physical newspapers. He doesn't get very far: — No one yet has unlocked the puzzle of supporting a large newsroom purely on digital revenue …
Discussion:
Podcasting News, PJNet, MediaFile, Nieman Journalism Lab, New York Times and Pew Research Center