Top Items:
Danny Sullivan / Search Engine Land:
Analysis: Which URL Shortening Service Should You Use? — URL shortening services are experiencing a renaissance in the age of Twitter. When every character counts, these services reduce long URLs to tiny forms. But which is the best to use, when so many are offered and new ones seem to appear each day?
Saul Hansell / Bits:
World's Fastest Broadband at $20 Per Home — If you get excited about the prospect of really, really fast broadband Internet service, here's a statistic that will make heart race. Or your blood boil. Or both. — Pretty much the fastest consumer broadband in the world …
Aidan Malley / AppleInsider:
New Palm Pre apps underscore Apple's iPhone limitations — While third-party apps are being trumpeted as the iPhone's strength, key Palm Pre demos this week were designed to highlight their restrictions by taking advantage of those precise things that Apple won't allow.
Jenna Wortham / New York Times:
The iPhone Gold Rush — IS there a good way to nail down a steady income? In this economy? — Try writing a successful program for the iPhone. — Last August, Ethan Nicholas and his wife, Nicole, were having trouble making their mortgage payments. Medical bills from the birth of their younger son were piling up.
Brian X. Chen / Epicenter:
DiggBar Digs up Bitter Nostalgia Among Critics — Digg's new URL-shortening feature is aggregating as much controversy for the popular web site as it is traffic. — Critics are taking aim at the structure of DiggBar — a toolbar appearing at the top of a browser when users click a link at Digg.
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Joshua Schachter / joshua's blog:
on url shorteners — URL shortening services have been around for a number of years. Their original purpose was to prevent cumbersome URLs from getting fragmented by broken email clients that felt the need to wrap everything to an 80 column screen. But it's 2009 now, and this problem no longer exists.
Discussion:
Howard Lindzon, ThreatChaos, rc3.org, michael parekh on IT and The Progress Bar, Thanks:atul
Miguel Helft / New York Times:
Google's Plan for Out-of-Print Books Is Challenged — SAN FRANCISCO — The dusty stacks of the nation's great university and research libraries are full of orphans — books that the author and publisher have essentially abandoned. They are out of print, and while they remain under copyright …
Discussion:
Memex 1.1
Dirk Smillie / Forbes:
Murdoch Wants A Google Rebellion — The media mogul says Google is stealing from publishers. It could be the call to arms that newsrooms need. — Rupert Murdoch threw down the gauntlet to Google Thursday, accusing the search giant of poaching content it doesn't own and urging media outlets to fight back.
Camille Ricketts / VentureBeat:
The VC walking dead: Extended edition — [Update: Warburg Pincus LLC has been taken off the list of the walking dead. The data did not reflect the $15 billion fund it closed last April.] — A couple weeks ago, Dan Primack of PE Hub blogged a list of venture capital firms he termed the …
Eric Eldon / VentureBeat:
Facebook wants you to give credit where credit is due — Facebook is testing out a way for people to show how much they appreciate friends' status updates, links and other items on the site — its a new feature called “credits.” The idea is a more advanced form of commenting or liking …
Maija Palmer / Financial Times:
Opera wins chorus of approval — The death of Opera Software has been predicted many times, but the Norwegian internet browser company continues to steadily grow its niche position in a market dominated by Microsoft's Internet Explorer. — Outside technical circles, few people realise …
John Mahoney / Gizmodo:
How the Conficker Problem Just Got Much Worse — On the surface, April 1 came and went without a peep from the dreaded Conficker megaworm. But security experts see a frightening reality, one where Conficker is now more powerful and more dangerous than ever.