Top Items:
Martin Peers / Wall Street Journal:
Demands on Network Are an iPhone Hang-Up — The iPhone has made AT&T the cool kid on the cellphone block, bringing in lots of new customers all eager to play with the shiny new device. — Trouble is, the iPhone is expensive for AT&T, and not just because of the heavy subsidies on the initial purchase price.
Discussion:
VentureBeat, 9 to 5 Mac, GigaOM, DSLreports, The iPhone Blog, Open IT Strategies, tinyComb, mocoNews and www.pocketgamer.biz
RELATED:
Matt Buchanan / Gizmodo:
WSJ: Unlimited Data Phone Plans Are Doomed Thanks to the iPhone — The complicated tango between the iPhone and AT&T's network isn't a new story, but the latest stats—web browsing eats 69 percent of phone bandwidth—highlight the fragility of networks, allowing fresh portents of doom.
Howard Kurtz / Washington Post:
Lack of Vision To Blame for Newspaper Woes — Is this it? — Is the product you are accustomed to holding in your hands a relic, soon to go the way of silent movies and manual typewriters? — I have been one of the industry's most fervent optimists, convinced that somehow, some way, newspapers would find a path to survival.
RELATED:
Peter Kafka / MediaMemo:
Google Talking to New York Times, Washington Post About... Something — Remember last week, when Google was forced to explain why it wasn't single-handedly destroying American newspapers? — Turns out the company is in talks with some of the country's biggest newspapers to... well, save them isn't the right phrase.
Philip Elmer-DeWitt / Apple 2.0:
Amazon re-Kindles the iPhone — It took Amazon (AMZN) less than a month after the release of the second-generation Kindle electronic-book reader to put a free Kindle application on the iPhone App Store. It took another two months for it to fix the app's second most annoying drawback …
Discussion:
NEWSFACTOR, ReadWriteWeb, Amazon.com, TechCrunch, Ars Technica, CNET News, Softpedia News, BNET Technology, TeleRead, jkOnTheRun, GottaBeMobile.com, MobileCrunch, MobileContentToday and Technology Live, Thanks:mrinaldesai
RELATED:
Charles Starrett / iLounge:
Amazon opens iPhone-optimized Kindle Store, conflict expected? — Ahead of the release of iPhone OS 3.0, Amazon has launched a new version of its Kindle Store optimized for the iPhone and iPod touch. Accessible from the “Get Books” button in Amazon's Kindle for iPhone app …
Nilay Patel / Engadget:
Sony CEO Howard Stringer on music: “If we had gone with open technology from the start, I think we probably would have beaten Apple” — We've always had a soft spot for Sony CEO Sir Howard Stringer, and it sounds like the old man's doing more than cajoling Tom Hanks into telling jokes following …
RELATED:
Ina Fried / CNET News:
Microsoft confirms Windows 7 coming this year — This won't come as a surprise, but Microsoft is planning to release Windows 7 this year, in time for the holiday shopping season. — What is new is that the software maker is finally willing to put itself on the line and say as much.
RELATED:
Chris Matyszczyk / CNET News:
Facebook confirms removal of two Holocaust denial groups. Is it enough? — Facebook has confirmed my earlier suspicion that it has disabled two of the five Holocaust denial groups whose presence has caused much controversy over the past week, following attorney Brian Cuban's consistent pressure for the groups' removal.
RELATED:
Charles Starrett / iLounge:
Apple rejects BitTorrent control app Drivetrain [Updated] — Apple has rejected iPhone developer Maza Digital's Drivetrain application, a remote control for Transmission, a BitTorrent client for Mac OS X and other platforms. After an initial email stating that Drivetrain required …
Discussion:
NewTeeVee, VentureBeat, Engadget, Threat Level, Download Squad, last100, TorrentFreak, Gizmodo, Edible Apple, TechSpot, 9 to 5 Mac, TeleRead and Mashable!
Dan Frommer / Silicon Alley Insider:
Apple Rejects Another iPhone App: Religious Photo Parodies ‘Objectionable’ — Apple (AAPL) continues to serve as nanny and tastemaker for its iPhone app store. It's rejected yet another app from the app store: A religious photo parody app called “Me So Holy.” Apple insists the app is “objectionable.”
RELATED:
Ernesto / TorrentFreak:
Pirate Bay Closer to a Retrial, Demands New Investigation — A few days after the verdict in the Pirate Bay trial was made public, judge Tomas Norström was heavily criticized for his involvement with pro-copyright lobby groups. To everyone's surprise, Norström never declared these activities before he took on the case.
Discussion:
p2pnet
RELATED:
Tarmo Virki / Reuters:
Google's Android seen gaining support — HELSINKI (Reuters) - Google's Android operating system is gaining support in the mobile industry, with 8 million Android phones to be sold in 2009, up 10-fold from a year ago, research firm Strategy Analytics said on Monday.
RELATED:
Rob Goodlatte Today / Facebook Blog:
Friend Lists: Now in Chat — Since we launched Facebook Chat, many of you have asked for ways to organize your connections and to control which friends see you online. Maybe you want to be online with your best friends but offline with your work colleagues.
The Boy Genius / Boy Genius Report:
T-Mobile G1 v2 made by Motorola, not HTC? Motorola's first Android phone? — You read that right! We just got a tip that basically more or less confirmed the phone we posted a couple days is going to be manufactured by Motorola for T-Mobile. Why isn't HTC in the picture on this one?
Emil Protalinski / Ars Technica:
Microsoft's next Apple price attack: Zune Pass vs iTunes — Microsoft's Laptop Hunter ads (one, two, three, and four) must be doing quite well, because what Microsoft started off as a price attack on Macs seems to have transcended over to the online music store business.
Eric Pfanner / New York Times:
A Latte With Journalism on the Side — How about an interview with that latte? — Several coffee shops set to open next month in the Czech Republic plan to offer more than the usual array of cafe services. As they sip their drinks, visitors will also be able to surf the Web …
The Official Google Blog:
Energy and the Internet — There's been a lot of debate lately about the growing amount of energy needed to power the Internet, and we wanted to weigh in on the discussion. A few months ago, I first blogged about the about amount of energy used in one Google search.
Katie Marsal / AppleInsider:
Apple freezes Snow Leopard APIs as software nears final stretch — Apple this past weekend distributed a new beta of Mac OS X 10.6 Snow Leopard that altered the programming methods used to optimize code for multi-core Macs, telling developers they were the last programming-oriented changes planned ahead of the software's release.
Zachary M. Seward / Nieman Journalism Lab:
The New York Times envisions version 2.0 of the newspaper — The New York Times Co.'s research and development group has some of the best views in their midtown skyscraper — 24 floors above the newsrooms, higher even than the executives' suites. Developers in the core R&D group …
Dan Ackerman / Crave: The gadget blog:
Lenovo updates Netbook line: meet the IdeaPad S10-2 — We were impressed with the recent 6-cell battery upgrade for Lenovo's S10 Netbook, and now the company (most famous for the ThinkPad line of business laptops) has announced a bigger revamp. — The Lenovo IdeaPad S10-2 (well …
Google News Blog:
More ways to see the story — Last Thursday we launched a new format for story pages on Google News. These are the pages you see when you click the “all [#] news articles” link of each cluster of articles which cover the same news event—or “story,” as we say on the Google News team.
Andrew Sinkov / Evernote Blogcast:
Evernote for BlackBerry Is Here — Evernote for BlackBerry, you say? — The, much (read: MUCH) requested, native Evernote for BlackBerry is now available. Yes, it's true. BlackBerry® owners, you now get a slick app to create new notes and search through all of your existing Evernote content.
Discussion:
Lifehacker, Download Squad, MobileContentToday, jkOnTheRun, WebWorkerDaily, geeksugar and GottaBeMobile.com
Kelly Hodgkins / Boy Genius Report:
BlackBerry Storm OS 4.7.0.141 fails Verizon Wireless testing — Wondering what happened to the Storm OS .141 update we said should have dropped late last month? We had heard rumors of some problems with the OS but over the weekend we got word from a trusted ninja that the much anticipated OS .141 has failed Verizon Wireless' testing.