Top Items:
Ashlee Vance / New York Times:
Oracle Agrees to Acquire Sun Microsystems — The Oracle Corporation, the technology information company, announced Monday that it would acquire a rival, Sun Microsystems, for $9.50 a share, which would value the transition at $7.4 billion. — The deal with Oracle came about two weeks after I.B.M. ended its talks with Sun.
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Om Malik / GigaOM:
Oracle to Buy Sun (and MySQL) for $7.4B — Updated: Less than a month after it walked away from a $7 billion deal with IBM, Sun Microsystems says that it has entered into a definitive merger agreement with database and enterprise software giant Oracle. Oracle will acquire Sun common stock for $9.50 per share in cash.
Larry Dignan / Between the Lines:
Oracle buys Sun; Now owns Java; Becomes a hardware player — Updated: Oracle said Monday that it will buy Sun Microsystems for $9.50 a share in cash, or about $5.6 billion excluding debt, in a deal that plunges Larry Ellison & Co. into the hardware market. The company added that the acquisition …
Discussion:
Ed Burnette's Dev Connection, I4U News, deal architect, THINK IT Services and TheNextWeb.com
Jonathan Skillings / CNET News:
Oracle to buy Sun in $7.4 billion deal — Oracle, not IBM, will be buying Sun Microsystems. — Oracle and Sun announced Monday that they have entered into a definitive agreement under which Oracle will acquire Sun common stock for $9.50 per share in cash.
Discussion:
The Earth Times Online …, Wall Street Journal, The Register, Tech Trader Daily, Tech Check with Jim Goldman, Reuters, TechCrunch, VentureBeat, Data Center Knowledge, SmoothSpan Blog, Network World, eWeek, Beyond Search, Jeremy's Blog, Epicenter, Electronista, Smalltalk Tidbits …, Jeremy Zawodny's blog, CenterNetworks, Gearlog and TechVi
BBC:
Adobe Flash secures set-top deal — Adobe has secured a deal to put its Flash software into many of the chips that go inside TVs and set-top boxes. — It will enable developers and content providers to create applications to deliver web-based content such as news, weather and share prices to TV screens.
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Adobe:
Adobe Extends Flash Platform to Digital Home
Adobe Extends Flash Platform to Digital Home
Discussion:
Download Squad, techblog.dallasnews.com, SlashGear, Xconomy, Engadget HD and Contentinople
Brad Stone / New York Times:
Adobe in Push to Spread Web Video to TV Sets
Adobe in Push to Spread Web Video to TV Sets
Discussion:
Podcasting News, Business Wire, Gadgetell, CinemaTech, Gizmodo, 9 to 5 Mac, GMSV and Slashdot
Jason Hiner / Between the Lines:
Have we arrived in the post-Windows era? — Microsoft knew this day was coming. This was the reason it desperately wanted — no, needed — to take down Netscape in 1996. Netscape wasn't just trying to build a program for reading text and photos across a network of connected computers.
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Open Source
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Seth H. Weintraub / Computerworld Blogs:
Windows 7 application limit opens door for Android
Windows 7 application limit opens door for Android
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OStatic blogs
Electronista:
Microsoft asks just $15 for each XP netbook
Microsoft asks just $15 for each XP netbook
Discussion:
Computerworld Blogs, I4U News, The Toybox, Wall Street Journal, DailyFinance, TechSpot and Neowin.net
Sylvie Barak / Inquirer:
Apple netbooks manufactured by Foxconn rumoured — Apple sliced down to netbook size? — WE'VE PICKED UP ON some Chinese whispering which would have us believe Apple could be about to release its very own netbook, with Foxconn Electronics chosen as the fruity toymaker's main manufacturing partner.
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DigiTimes:
Foxconn to land Apple netbook order, says paper — Foxconn Electronics (Hon Hai Precision Industry) is in the running to land orders for a netbook from Apple, according to a Chinese-language Commercial Times report citing sources from the component supply chain.
Peter Svensson / Associated Press:
Washington, D.C. will be 1st to get free mobile TV — Washington will be the first U.S. city to get free digital TV broadcasts for mobile devices like cell phones, laptop computers and in-car entertainment systems, broadcasters were set to announce Monday. — Broadcasts using new …
Rafe Needleman / CNET News:
Dear Twitter: Please take my money — With respect to my cranky co-worker Charles Cooper, and reversing even my own Oprah/Kutcher-prodded twitterrant the other day, Twitter is an important platform for publishing and marketing, and it needs to be discussed as such, not brushed aside.
Zachary Rodgers / ClickZ:
Digg Ends Exclusive Ad Deal with Microsoft — Digg is ending its two-year-old exclusive ad selling relationship with Microsoft, one year earlier than the deal was set to expire. — The two will continue working together on remnant and so-called “network reserve” inventory.
Discussion:
TechCrunch, Search Engine Watch, Search Engine Land, paidContent.org and Andy Beal's Marketing Pilgrim
MG Siegler / TechCrunch:
How Many New Twitter Users Post-Oprah? A Lot. Maybe Over A Million. — Late last night, former Engadget editor-in-chief Ryan Block tweeted out that he had done some research to attempt to quantify the “Oprah Effect” — that is, the number of users who signed up for Twitter after Oprah featured the service on her show on Friday.
Douglas Quenqua / New York Times:
Recklessly Seeking Sex on Craigslist — THIS is it, Melvin thought: Craigslist is about to get me killed. — A recent divorcé who lacked the money and confidence for a conventional date, Melvin, 35, had been lured to a stranger's apartment by the promise of anonymous sex.
Discussion:
Online Dating Insider