Top Items:
Brandon LeBlanc / The Windows Blog:
Windows 7 Release Candidate Update — There certainly has been a lot of discussion about Windows 7 in the last few weeks. A lot of folks want to know when they can get their hands on the official RC, when we are going to RTM, and what I had for breakfast.
Discussion:
Hardware 2.0, Microsoft Pri0, PC World, CrunchGear, Microsoft Watch, Donna's SecurityFlash, The Microsoft Blog, The Register, ChannelWeb, Gizmodo, Network World, ITworld.com, Intel Software Network Blogs, Full of I.T., The Download Blog, TechSpot, All about Microsoft, Teching It Easy and ithinkdifferrent
RELATED:
Brad Linder / Download Squad:
Windows 7 RC scheduled for release next week — A leaked copy of the release candidate for Windows 7 may have hit the gray areas of the internet this morning, but Microsoft isn't quite ready to distribute the OS to the general public. The company is very close to being ready though.
Discussion:
Hardware 2.0, CNET News, Technologizer, Engadget, I4U News, PC World, BetaNews, CrunchGear and Ars Technica
Pthurrott / SuperSite Blog:
Secret No More: Revealing Windows XP Mode for Windows 7 — Rafael Rivera and Paul Thurrott reveal a new Windows 7 application compatibility feature called Windows XP Mode. Yes, it's that “secret new feature” you've been hearing about ... Over a month ago, we were briefed …
Discussion:
CNET News, Lockergnome Blog Network, BetaNews, TidBITS, Neowin.net, Technologizer, TechFlash and Gizmodo, Thanks:bpmiller
RELATED:
Scott Woodgate / The Windows Blog:
Coming Soon: Windows XP Mode and Windows Virtual PC — Windows XP Mode is specifically designed to help small businesses move to Windows 7. Windows XP Mode provides you with the flexibility to run many older productivity applications on a Windows 7 based PC.
Danny Sullivan / Search Engine Land:
How To Overhype Your Search Engine — After covering search for 13 years, I'm more than a little jaded. I've seen any number of search start-ups promise to revolutionize how we search. None of them have in the huge way they've promised, other than Google — and it's a special case.
RELATED:
John Gruber / Daring Fireball:
Twitter Clients Are a UI Design Playground — Twitter's elevation into the mainstream has, predictably, spawned a backlash against the service. To paraphrase the great Yogi Berra, “Nobody uses Twitter anymore; there are too many people using it.” — The most interesting product …
RELATED:
Jacqui Cheng / Ars Technica:
Apple found guilty of willful patent infringement — Apple has been found guilty of willfully infringing on a “predictive snooping” patent awarded to Opti Inc. in 2002. The company has been ordered to pay just over $19 million in compensation, despite its attempts to have the patent thrown out.
Loren Bendele / VentureBeat:
California's proposed “Amazon tax” - a destructive solution — As in most states, when Californians buy something online from a store that is based in California, they have to pay sales tax. When they buy something online from a store that does not have a presence in California, they don't have to pay sales tax.
Chris Wilson / Slate:
It's time to move beyond those squiggly letter tests that Web sites use to weed out spam. — If only someone had listened to computer scientist Moni Naor in 1996, proving that you're human on the Internet would have been so much more interesting. Naor was among the first to propose …
Discussion:
Slashdot
Elise Ackerman / Mercury News:
Google's Larry Page to be a father — It's official: both Google guys are going to be Google dads. — Larry Page, 37, and his wife, Lucy, 29, are expecting their first child this fall, a friend of the couple confirmed to the Mercury News on Friday. Whether it's a boy or girl: No word from the Pages.
Steve Rubel / Micro Persuasion:
Google's New “What's Popular” Feature Aims to Clone Digg — Google's personalized home page, iGoogle, added a new feature that basically clones the core features of Digg and StumbleUpon by embedding them into a gadget that is easily accessible from right within the web desktop.
Thanks:steverubel
Owen Thomas / Gawker:
Did Julia Allison Break the Law in Search of Facebook Fame? — Former dating columnist Julia Allison, an Internet microcelebrity now famous for not being particularly famous, has finally gone too far in her attempt to acquire Facebook fans. She may even have broken the law.
Michael Masnick / Techdirt:
Did AT&T Lie To Congress About Using Behavioral Advertising? — Congress is apparently holding hearings this week about behavioral advertising — the controversial online practice of targeting ads to people based on where they surf. In the past, Congress has suggested that firms such as NebuAd that do this are breaking the law.
RELATED:
Forbes:
The full text of Steve Jobs' deposition to the Securities and Exchange Commission. — On March 18, 2008, attorneys for the Securities and Exchange Commission grilled Apple Co-Founder Steve Jobs over issues of backdating of stock options. Forbes obtained the 119-page sworn deposition …
Robert A. Guth / Wall Street Journal:
Raising Bill Gates — SEATTLE — Spend time with the family of Bill Gates, and eventually someone will mention the water incident. — The future software mogul was a headstrong 12-year-old and was having a particularly nasty argument with his mother at the dinner table.
Stephen Shankland / CNET News:
Google fixes severe Chrome security hole — Google released a new version of its Chrome browser Thursday to fix a high-severity security problem. — The problem affects Google's mainstream stable version of Chrome and is fixed in the new version 1.0.154.59.
Nate Anderson / Ars Technica:
Cable: DPI is good for us; Congressman: it's frightening — While the cable industry told Congress that deep packet inspection technology was great for consumers, Rick Boucher (D-VA) expressed some doubts. DPI's “privacy intrusion potential is nothing short of frightening,” he said …
RELATED: