Top Items:
Kim Sengupta / The Independent:
iPhones in Iraq - the US Army's new weapon — Applications prove invaluable for soldiers on the battlefield — In Basra's Hayaniyah district, a notorious stronghold of Shia militias, a US army sergeant leading a patrol faced two suspects in the street. Amid rising tension he produced …
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Nathan Eddy / eWeek:
University of Missouri Requires Students Buy iPhone or iPod — Budding reporters and editors at the Missouri School of Journalism will be required to own an Apple iPhone or iPod touch starting this fall. — Journalism students at the University of Missouri's School of Journalism …
Steven Levy / Epicenter:
Stephen Wolfram Reveals Radical New Formula for Web Search — The home page is nearly blank. At the center, just below a colorful logo, you'll find an empty data field. Type in a phrase, hit Return, and knowledge appears. — No, it's not Google. It's Wolfram|Alpha, named after its creator …
Discussion:
Network World
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Serge Jespers:
The future of newspapers is now: New York Times Reader v2 released — Ever tried reading a newspaper on a plane? I bet you kept bumping into your neighbour, didn't you? Have you ever tried locating an article that you read last Wednesday in a stack of newspapers?
Financial Times:
Micro-payments considered for WSJ website — News Corp is planning to introduce micro-payments for individual articles and premium subscriptions to the Wall Street Journal's website this year, in a milestone in the news industry's race to find better online business models.
Discussion:
Mark Evans, CNET News, Epicenter, Mashable!, BuzzMachine, AppScout, Maximum PC all, ITworld.com, Reuters, TechSpot, mocoNews, TechVi and Silicon Alley Insider
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Harry McCracken / Technologizer:
Assuming There's a New York Times in 2040, I Hope It's Not This One — I just went to NYTimes.com, as I do multiple times a day. A split-second after I arrived at the homepage, it was covered up with a full-page ad overlay. That was irritating, but I'm willing to tolerate some annoyance in return for excellent free content.
Discussion:
Mashable!
Michael Arrington / TechCrunch:
Jew Haters Welcome At Facebook, As Long As They Aren't Lactating — Way more countries have laws against holocaust denial (11 or so) than breast feeding (0), but guess which one is banned on Facebook? That's right. Pictures of breast feeding babies are indecent, so they're a no go.
Discussion:
Team Think, Lockergnome Blog Network, odd time signatures, GMSV, broadstuff and GigaLaw.com Daily News
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Brian Cuban / THE CUBAN REVOLUTION:
Open Letter To Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg
Open Letter To Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg
Discussion:
Internet Evolution, Jon Burg's Future Visions, Stuff.co.nz, JTA, TomsTechBlog.com, Mashable!, CNN and beliefnet
Michelle Maisto / eWeek:
Verizon Wireless, ATandT Plan to Swap Wireless Assets — In separate announcements on May 8, AT&T announced it will purchase assets —particularly those of the former Alltel — from Verizon Wireless, and also that, pending regulatory approval, AT&T will sell assets from Centennial Communications to Verizon.
Discussion:
AppleInsider
JKK / jkkmobile:
Windows 7 on Viliv S5 UMPC — My Installation notes: — Have USB keyboard ready as you will need it ones. — Plug in dvd or usb stick with W7 media on it. — Open BIOS, choose your media as first boot drive.. boot from it. — Continue with Windows installer.. You can use S5's joystick …
Karl Bode / DSLreports:
Dish Network Loses 94,000 Subscribers — Still has 13.5 million subscribers... While DirecTV just posted their best subscriber gains in four years (460,000 new subscribers), rival Dish Network this morning announced they lost 94,000 subscribers during the first quarter.
Tameka Kee / paidContent.org:
Beyond Clicks And CPMs: A Look At 'Engagement'-Based Ad Deals — CPMs are the default standard for buying display, and paid search ads get measured in clicks. But when it comes to valuing a social-media sponsorship, “advertorial” content on a magazine site or even a virtual-world campaign …
Ted Dziuba / The Register:
Firefox passive-aggressives adjudicate Nerd Law — Better than a severed horse head — Free whitepaper - Achieving Efficient Governance Risk and Compliance — Fail and You Last week, blood was shed in the Firefox community as two popular extensions to the browser - NoScript and Adblock Plus …
Saul Hansell / Bits:
Signs Your Wireless Carrier Loves You — Do you ever want to know how much your cellphone company loves you? — Maybe you don't. But your carrier, in fact, is spending a lot of time thinking about how much you mean to it. It is looking at how much you pay every month …
Erick Schonfeld / TechCrunch:
NBC Invests In Video Search Startup EveryZing And Signs Up As Its Biggest Customer — Video search startup EveryZing just landed its biggest fish yet: NBC Universal. Boston-based EveryZing signed a master service agreement with NBC to provide video search and search-optimization technologies across …
Arn / MacRumors:
Citrix Demos of a New Kind of Virtual Machine for Mac — Citrix made a number of announcements last week related to Mac and iPhone. While most of these announcements were targeted specifically towards IT/enterprise customers, one announcement has more potential mainstream significance.
Discussion:
Softpedia News
Chris Foresman / Ars Technica:
Survey: one in five US households are cellphone only — The latest results from the National Center for Health Statistics' survey on wireless phone use are in, and they reveal that just over 20 percent of all US households have now cut the wire and exclusively use cell phones for voice communication.
Alex Chitu / Google Operating System:
Google Chrome Has the Most Effective Updater — A paper published last week titled “Why Silent Updates Boost Security” showed that Google Chrome is the browser that has the most effective updating mechanism. Google Chrome's updater works automatically, it requires no user interaction and it can't be disabled from the interface.
Discussion:
Roger's Security Blog
Mike Shields / Adweek:
A New (Full-Page) Look for Online Ads — ShortTail Media's D30, soon in beta, puts traditional spots between Web pages — NEW YORK David Payne wants to radically alter what online ads look like and how they get sold. And he's recruiting some of Web publishing's heavy hitters to help in his cause …
Scott Gilbertson / The Register:
OpenOffice 3.1 ready to lick Microsoft's suite? — Huzzah for Windows, ho-hum for Linux, OS X — Free whitepaper - Achieving Efficient Governance Risk and Compliance — Review OpenOffice.org remains the most popular open source answer to Microsoft's ubiquitous Office suite …
Discussion:
PC World
NTT DOCOMO Global Site:
DOCOMO Develops Spatial Audio Transmission Technology for Mobile Phones — NTT DOCOMO, INC. announced today that it has developed a highly efficient mobile spatial audio transmission technology that enables a mobile phone user to assign a spatial position to each sound source when listening …