Top Items:
Michael Arrington / TechCrunch:
About Those New CrunchPad Pictures — A little background for those of you who haven't heard of the CrunchPad: This is the post that kicked off the project. I wanted something I couldn't buy, and found people who said it could be built for a lot less than I imagined.
RELATED:
Devin Coldewey / CrunchGear:
TechCrunch Tablet makes an early debut
TechCrunch Tablet makes an early debut
Discussion:
Narcissistic Infarction, ArabCrunch, Liliputing, The Toybox, Gizmodo, Enterprise Irregulars, HipMojo.com, Gadget Lab, Incremental Blogger, Sean Percival's Blog and GottaBeMobile.com, Thanks:brickandclick
John Gruber / Daring Fireball:
How to Block the DiggBar — Last week Digg released something they call the DiggBar, which serves as both a new interface for Digg and doubles as a URL shortening service. The way it works is that you just add “digg.com/” at the beginning of any URL, and Digg creates a short URL in the form of digg.com/1234.
Discussion:
Leah Culver, Silicon Alley Insider, TheNextWeb.com, CenterNetworks and The Blog Herald, Thanks:atul
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Greg / 3 Dog Media:
Google and Digg's Secret Backroom Deal — Over the last couple of months, I've been getting the urge to get back into blogging a bit. However, when it's been awhile since you've attempted to construct a thought longer than a 140 character tweet, actually doing it is a bit harder than you regular bloggers might imagine.
Marguerite Reardon / CNET News:
AT&T uses Twitter during service outage — Want to find out why you suddenly don't have Internet access or cell phone service? You might want to check out the social-networking site Twitter. — It seems that Twitter was one of the main ways that phone company AT&T has been communicating …
Discussion:
Between the Lines, eWeek, DSLreports and Tech Check with Jim Goldman, Thanks:mrinaldesai
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Barrett Lyon / BitGravity: Blog:
Destroy the Internet with a hacksaw? — This morning many people in Silicon Valley woke up without 911 service, Internet, cellular phones, and in some cases TV. Web sites were impacted and Internet traffic between a few major datacenters stopped flowing. Several of our employees were cut off from the Internet and phone service.
Ina Fried / CNET News:
Time for an audit of Microsoft's ‘Apple Tax’ — Microsoft puts forth a ‘tax return’ showing the cost difference between a Windows PC or Mac purchase. However, CNET News' Ina Fried suggests auditors take a close look at the itemized deductions. — Microsoft is back touting the “Apple Tax” …
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Brandon LeBlanc / The Windows Blog:
Avoid the Apple Tax - Cash in on the value of Windows
Avoid the Apple Tax - Cash in on the value of Windows
Discussion:
eWeek, CNET News, Technologizer, Apple Watch, Microsoft Watch, All about Microsoft, MacRumors, AppleInsider, Ars Technica and Computerworld Blogs
Joshua Topolsky / Engadget:
New Laptop Hunters ad proves Macs are just for children — Microsoft's latest installment in its popular series of ripped-from-the-headlines, “real America” style 'puter-buying adventures follows a mom and son duo — Lisa and Jackson. We learn during the commercial that the two need a computer which is …
Discussion:
Gizmodo, BoomTown, CNET News, Tech Beat, TechCrunch, Technologizer, TUAW, LiveSide, Engadget HD, techeblog.com and digg.com
Gmail Blog:
New in Labs: Inserting images — Well, it's about time. You no longer have to use workarounds to put images into your messages or attach images when you really want to inline them. Just turn on “Inserting images” from the Labs tab under Settings, and you'll see a new toolbar icon like this:
Discussion:
Google Blogoscoped, Lifehacker, Google Operating System, RotorBlog.com and Digital Inspiration, Thanks:atul
Austin / Billions With Zero Knowledge:
Why Twitter's Next Fail Whale can be found on their Recruiting Page — I love Twitter and am fascinated by the ecosystem that Evan, Biz and the team at Twitter have created around the popular microblogging service. While many people on the sidelines are obsessed with when Twitter will make money …
Thanks:austinhill
Saul Hansell / Bits:
Time Warner's Unlimited Bandwidth Plan: $150 a Month — Time Warner Cable has modestly softened its proposal to impose bandwidth limits on all of its broadband data customers. Landel Hobbs, the company's chief operating officer, has just published a post with the new price tiers for a test of the plan it will conduct in four cities.
Discussion:
eWeek, Silicon Alley Insider, Stop the Cap!, Electronista, Public Knowledge, Light Reading, Digital Savant, DSLreports and GigaOM
Nathan Hodge / Danger Room:
Activist Charged for Inciting ‘Twitter Revolution’ (Updated) — A Moldovan activist faces criminal charges for organizing demonstrations that were enabled by social networking tools like Twitter and Facebook, the Russian press reports. — In an interview with Russian news agency ITAR-TASS …
Priya Ganapati / Gadget Lab:
CompUSA Comes Back From the Dead — About three months ago, Loretta Alkalay, a retired Florida resident, wanted to get a new HDTV. So she decided to give the CompUSA near her home a try. — Yes, CompUSA. The once-bankrupt electronics retailer is making a comeback …
Neil McAllister / Neil McAllister's blog:
What if Oracle bought Sun Microsystems? — If Oracle picks up where IBM left off, database, storage, and Java customers could be in for radical changes — So much for that. According to reports, Sun Microsystems has rejected IBM's buyout offer, apparently preferring to stick to the dogma …
Christian Zibreg / TG Daily:
Emerging battlefield: Browser installers — Chicago (IL) - Mozilla was surprised to discover that, every day, 50,000 people do not install Firefox after a successful software download. At the same time, Safari and Chrome leverage installers to their own advantage in a very efficient way.
Ellen Messmer / Network World:
How serious is threat to power grid? Depends who you ask. — Expert opinion differs widely over a report that the U.S. electric power-grid has been compromised by cyberspies, perhaps from Russia and China, who have installed malware so they can disrupt industrial control systems …
Paul Boutin / Industry Standard:
Microsoft cuts Live Labs staff by half, refocuses on search — Microsoft has reacted to the global economic slump by reassigning half of its forward-looking Live Labs staff to other projects around the company. The remaining half will focus solely on Microsoft's search products …
Discussion:
Beyond Search
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Joseph Tartakoff / paidContent.org:
Microsoft Breaks Up Its Live Labs Group
Microsoft Breaks Up Its Live Labs Group
Discussion:
MobileContentToday, Microsoft Watch, The Register, TechFlash, CNET News, Brier Dudley's blog and All about Microsoft
Kaspersky Lab Weblog:
The neverending story — Last night the Kido (aka Conficker/ Downadup) botnet kicked into action - what everyone's been on the lookout for since 1st April. — The computers infected with Trojan-Downloader.Win32.Kido (aka Conficker.c) contacted each other over P2P, telling infected machines to download new malicious files.
Discussion:
PC World, eWeek, Zero Day, Digits, blogs.ft.com, ReadWriteWeb, Threat Level and CyberCrime & Doing Time
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Jeff Atwood / Coding Horror:
Sex, Lies, and Software Development — Are there any programming jobs you wouldn't take? Not because the jobs didn't pay enough, had poor benefits, or limited upside — but because the work itself made you uncomfortable? Consider the tale of one freshmeat.net writer: … That was eight years ago.
Darren Waters / dot.life blog:
Network storage still not consumer-friendly — Network-attached storage (NAS) has been on the verge of breaking through into the mainstream consumer space for quite a few years. — The idea is deceptively simple - plug a hard drive into your network (that is, into your router) …
Telegraph:
Pete Waterman: ‘I was exploited by Google’ — Pete Waterman, the force behind dozens of multi-million selling chart hits, claims he is being “exploited” by internet giant Google. — The 62-year-old said the Rick Astley classic Never Gonna Give You Up, which he co-wrote and which was the subject …
Discussion:
Search Engine Land
Adam Frucci / Gizmodo:
Survey: 100% of Teens Want an iPod; 0% of Teens Want Any Other Player — News doesn't get much worse than this for the Zunes and Sansas of the world: a whopping 0% of surveyed teens planned on buying their devices, with 100% wanting an iPod in the coming year.
Guardian:
How to trend swear words in the Guardian — Future Platforms MD Tom Hume trended profanity in the Guardian using the Content API. “Being the kind of childish individual who still gets kicks out of looking rude words up in the dictionary, I decided to use the API to examine changes in obscenity in the last 10 years.”