Top Items:
Ibrahim Bokharouss / Gmail Blog:
New in Labs: Gmail search made easier (and lazier) — On the Gmail team, we believe finding the right email among thousands of messages can be as important as finding the right web page across the billions of web pages out there. So with the aim of making search in Gmail easier …
Discussion:
CNET News, Google Operating System, TechCrunch, eWeek, Mashable!, InformationWeek and The Noisy Channel, Thanks:atul
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Kevin Rose / Digg the Blog:
DiggBar Launches Today! — Hey everyone - — Starting today, we'll begin rolling out a new product we are calling the DiggBar. Before we dive into the details, check out this short video overview: — The DiggBar allows you to... - Digg directly on the destination site: No more awkward toggling between the story page and Digg.
Discussion:
TechCrunch, Search Engine Watch, Download Squad, Obsessable, CNET News, Mashable!, TECH.BLORGE.com and Loic Le Meur Blog, Thanks:atul
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MG Siegler / VentureBeat:
With DiggBar, Digg wants to be central to sharing content on the web — and it could work — The main problem I have with Digg these days is that I have to go to digg.com to use it. Sure, there are other ways to see stories on the site, such as RSS. But if you want to Digg a story, you have to go to the site.
Owen Thomas / Gawker:
Mark Zuckerberg's Status Update: Paranoid as Hell — Is Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg hunting leakers? His internal memo about CFO Gideon Yu's departure got forwarded to bloggers. Perhaps he was hoping that would happen, and not just so his spin would get out.
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Libby Purves / Times of London:
Village mob thwarts Google Street View car — Angry villagers formed a human chain to thwart the progress of a Google Street View car that was in the process of taking photographs of their homes. — Police were called to Broughton in Buckinghamshire yesterday, after furious villagers blocked …
Discussion:
The Technology Chronicles, Gawker, Andy Beal's Marketing Pilgrim, Electricpig.co.uk and GPS Obsessed
New York Times:
I.B.M. Reportedly Will Buy Rival Sun for $7 Billion — I.B.M. appears on the verge of acquiring Sun Microsystems, a longtime rival in the computer server and software markets, for nearly $7 billion. — The two companies have been negotiating for weeks, ironing out terms of an agreement …
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Dan Stober / Stanford News:
Free Stanford course on developing iPhone software — Want to know how to write programs for the iPhone and iPod touch? Beginning this week, a Stanford computer science class on that buzzworthy topic will be available online to the general public for free. — The 10-week course, iPhone Application Programming, is a hot ticket.
Ryan Naraine / Threatpost Blog:
Microsoft issues PowerPoint zero-day warning — Microsoft has issued an advisory to warn about an under-attack zero-day vulnerability affecting its PowerPoint software. — According to the pre-patch advisory, the flaw allows remote code execution if a user opens a booby-trapped PowerPoint file.
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Eric Eldon / VentureBeat:
Public market buys ChangYou's virtual goods model, stock up after IPO — In a public market vote of confidence on the business of virtual goods, Chinese game-maker ChangYou (CYOU) has gone public on NASDAQ today and its stock is currently up around 25 percent on heavy trading. Why?
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Dan Frommer / Silicon Alley Insider:
RIM Blows The Doors Off — BlackBerry maker RIM (RIMM) beat its preannounced Christmas quarter results, and Q1 looks very strong. Most important: RIM says gross margins will improve this quarter, a key concern. Shares jumped 20% after hours. — Investors had been concerned that RIM's margins …
Discussion:
AppleInsider, Reuters, Agence France Presse, BetaNews, Research in Motion, Between the Lines, Digital Daily, Tech Trader Daily and CNET News, Thanks:atul
Nick / Rough Type:
Google lifts its skirts — Yesterday was a remarkable day for the small, slightly obsessed band of Google data-center watchers of which I am one. Around each of the company's sprawling server farms is a high metal fence patrolled by a particularly devoted squad of rent-a-cops, who may or may not be cyborgian in nature.
Todd Bishop / TechFlash:
Microsoft: Distinction between PC and phone gets even blurrier — Speaking at the CTIA Wireless convention in Las Vegas this morning, Microsoft's Robbie Bach started not by touting Windows Mobile but by talking about computers — specifically, netbooks. His comments, via webcast …
Robb Topolski / Public Knowledge:
AT&T Quietly Updates its Wireless Plans — Quietly, last night, AT&T revised its wireless plans. In the latest changes to the service terms, it looks like AT&T is trying to exempt its own video services but metering services like the Slingbox or other video web sites. See, this change (changes emphasized):
Adrian Covert / Gizmodo:
Palm Pre Apps Hands On: Hardly Lightweight, Looking Great — We're nearing the still unknown release date for the Palm Pre, and new details are slowly surfacing. Sprint demoed the Pre's WebOS apps at CTIA, including PalmOS Emulator, Google Maps and Pandora. These look fantastic.
Discussion:
Ars Technica, TechCrunch, Silicon Alley Insider, IntoMobile, MobileCrunch and Electronista
Elizabeth Woyke / Forbes:
Samsung's Android Phone Plans — The handset maker plans to launch three “Google” phones this year. — Despite a fanatical amount of interest from the tech media and early adopters, Samsung has mostly kept quiet about its plans to develop phones using Google's mobile platform, Android.
BBC:
Piracy law cuts internet traffic — Internet traffic in Sweden fell by 33% as the country's new anti-piracy law came into effect, reports suggest. — Sweden's new policy - the Local IPRED law - allows copyright holders to force internet service providers (ISP) to reveal details of users sharing files.
Discussion:
CrunchGear, Silicon Alley Insider, Download Squad, Digital Daily, Gizmodo, DSLreports, NewTeeVee, open and Royal Pingdom
Emil Protalinski / Ars Technica:
Zune wants your living room, finally to go international? — According to two job postings, Microsoft is targeting the living room with the Zune and is looking to expand the Zune Marketplace to international markets. — Microsoft recently published two job postings that hint at two separate …
Saul Hansell / Bits:
Microsoft and the Corporate Identity Crisis — Do the people who run computers for big companies have an identity crisis? That was the impression I got after spending an hour Wednesday with Bob Muglia, the president of Microsoft's server and tool business.
Thanks:mrinaldesai
Brian Stelter / New York Times:
Piracy Puts Film Online One Month Before Open — In a case of piracy that some analysts called unprecedented, untold thousands of people watched a version of “X-Men Origins: Wolverine” online Wednesday, a full month before its scheduled theater release. — The film's distributor …
Discussion:
TeleRead, Maximum PC all, AppScout, Techdirt, CinemaTech, GigaLaw.com Daily News and WatchingTV Online
Svetlana Gladkova / Profy:
Microsoft To Officially Become a Monopoly in Russia — Yesterday Russian anti-monopoly authorities informed us about the fact that they intend to officially include Microsoft in the register of monopolies doing business in the country. To be listed as a monopoly, a company needs to hold …
Discussion:
CNET News
Elinor Mills / CNET News:
Microsoft helps keep Koobface virus off Facebook — Microsoft is working with Facebook to keep the persistent Koobface virus off the popular social networking site, the companies said on Thursday. — “In working with Facebook, we were able to add detection of Koobface …
Wall Street Journal:
Twitter's “Garyvee” Vaynerchuk Gets A Book Deal — Web wine guru branches into the print world — HarperStudio has signed a seven-figure, 10-book deal with Gary Vaynerchuk, a 33-year-old Belarusian-born wine retailer from New Jersey, who, except for a talk show appearance here and there …
Discussion:
TechCrunch, Wine Library TV, HarperStudio, Podcasting News, Gawker, NewTeeVee and Silicon Alley Insider, Thanks:atul
Leena Rao / TechCrunch:
Technorati Lays Off Another 10 Percent Of Employees — Blog search engine Technorati has laid off close to 10 percent of its staff, or 4 employees in its PR, engineering and general admin areas. The company's CEO, Richard Jalichandra confirmed the layoffs.
Thanks:atul
Clearwire News Room:
Clearwire to Launch WiMAX Innovation Network to Silicon Valley Developers — “WiMAX Innovation Network” to Accelerate 4G Mobile Broadband Development, Initially Covering More Than 20 Square Miles - — Clearwire Corporation (NASDAQ:CLWR) today announced a major step toward application development …
Discussion:
The Register, TechFlash, Computerworld, eWeek, FierceWireless, dailywireless.org, CNET News, DSLreports, GigaOM and Slashdot
Jill Colvin / New York Times:
You've Got Voice Mail, but Do You Care? — WHEN Steve Hamrick left his last job as manager at a software corporation, he had at least 25 unheard messages in his office voice mailbox. And that's not counting the unreturned calls on his cellphone or landline at home. — It's not that he doesn't like to talk.
Chloe Albanesius / PC Magazine:
Clearwire Chief Slams Wireless ‘Legacy Nonsense’ — WASHINGTON, D.C. — Clearwire chairman Craig McCaw on Wednesday slammed the legacy systems of his wireless competitors, and championed his company's upcoming WiMAX offerings as a flexible solution. — “Our job was to design the perfect antidote …
Discussion:
dailywireless.org