Top Items:
John Paczkowski / Digital Daily:
Microsoft Expected to Debut Updated Search Engine at D: All Things Digital — The long-awaited upgrade to Microsoft's search engine will soon make its debut. — Sources with knowledge of the situation said the company is expected to demonstrate it at our D: All Things Digital conference next week.
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Danny Sullivan / Search Engine Land:
Forget Kumo — Will Microsoft's New Search Engine Launch Soon As Bing? — It's not long now. Microsoft's new search engine has been widely expected to launch soon, and now it appears likely to happen within the next week or two. And might Bing be the new name?
Thanks:atul
Dean Takahashi / VentureBeat:
Movie fans to get a TV-friendly Netflix experience on Windows Media Center — Microsoft is announcing today that its Windows Media Center can now show more than 12,000 movies and TV shows from Netflix's library of online video rentals. — The videos are now available to watch instantly …
Discussion:
LiveSide, Gizmodo, Electronista, paidContent.org, CNET News, AppScout and Hacking NetFlix
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Greg Sterling / Search Engine Land:
Yahoo: We're Moving From Web Of Pages To Web Of Objects — Yahoo held a search event today in San Francisco at which the company connected the dots among a number of search initiatives that it has rolled out over the past couple of years: Search Assist, BOSS, Search Monkey, Search Pad and oneSearch.
Discussion:
Silicon Alley Insider, Yahoo! Search Blog, The Equity Kicker, The Technology Chronicles, paidContent.org and TechCrunch, Thanks:atul
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MG Siegler / TechCrunch:
Yahoo Search, As We Know It, Is Over — Earlier today, we were at Yahoo's “End of the 10 Blue Links” event. Basically, it was their state of search gathering, similar to the “Searchology” event that Google had last week. But there was a key difference, as anyone who was following along …
Discussion:
TechCrunch Europe, Webware.com, Digits, Lockergnome Blog Network, Bits, VentureBeat, BoomTown and ParisLemon, Thanks:atul
Eric Eldon / VentureBeat:
Tweeting Too Hard: A site for shaming the twitteringly self-important — For people like me who were raised to believe that being shamelessly self-absorbed is a bad thing, we finally have a site. For Twitter (many self-important types' new platform of choice). Maybe. — It's called Tweeting Too Hard.
Discussion:
Switched
Gmail Blog:
New in Labs: Automatic message translation — Back in the early days of human existence, before language had fully developed, our caveman ancestors probably did a lot of grunting. Language, and thus life, were pretty simple: watch out for that saber-toothed tiger ("Blorg! AIYA!!!")
Discussion:
Google Blogoscoped, Google Enterprise Blog, Google Operating System, Webware.com, internetnews.com, TechCrunch, Lifehacker, TheNextWeb.com, ReadWriteWeb, Gadgetell, Digital Inspiration, Download Squad, eWeek, The SiliconANGLE, Macworld, WebProNews, AppScout, Ubergizmo, Gear Diary, Mashable!, geeksugar and digg.com, Thanks:atul
Alexei Oreskovic / Reuters:
Facebook CEO says IPO a few years out — NEW YORK (Reuters) - Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg hopes to eventually take his company public but said it won't be for a few years, and stressed that the world's largest online social network is in no immediate need of capital.
Ed Lu / The Official Google Blog:
Energized about our first Google PowerMeter partners — Earlier this year I blogged about energy information and a tool our engineers developed called Google PowerMeter, a Google gadget that can show consumers their personal electricity consumption right on a home computer.
Discussion:
All things Indian Startups …, ReadWriteWeb, Gizmodo, Engadget and Earth2Tech, Thanks:atul
MG Siegler / TechCrunch:
The Freemium Model And A Desktop App Get The Thumbs Up With Pandora One — You'd be hard pressed to find someone who tries the online streaming radio service Pandora that doesn't like it. In fact, some users like it so much that they actually ask for ways to pay the company …
Liz Gannes / NewTeeVee:
Elemental Shakes Up Video Servers With Parallel Processing — Elemental Technologies — aka the smart young startup in Portland that makes video processing better by doing it in parallel — is beta-releasing a video encoding and transcoding server. — In the last year, Elemental has put GPUs …
The Independent:
File share programmer sued by record companies — Record companies went to court yesterday claiming €13 million from a Spaniard they claim profited from computer programs he designed to allow free music downloads from the internet. — The Promusicae association of Spanish record firms …
Discussion:
p2pnet
Darren Waters / BBC:
Wiping data ‘hits flu prediction’ — Forcing Google to delete user data after six months could dent its ability to predict pandemics such as swine flu, said the search giant's co-founder. — Larry Page said he thought more debate was needed around the issue of storing user data.
Mihai Parparita / Official Google Reader Blog:
Latest round of Reader improvements — The Google Reader team has just finished releasing a new version of Reader with a bunch of small changes and tweaks that we thought you'd like to know about. — If you've added enough friends in Reader that you're feeling overwhelmed, we're here to help.
Nilay Patel / Engadget:
Palm Pre to run $549 off-contract — We'd ventured a guess that the Pre would run close to $500 off-contract, and it looks like we were in the ballpark — Sprint customer service is apparently telling people that Palm's first WebOS device will run $549 without a two-year commitment.
Discussion:
Gear Diary, SlashPhone, PhoneDog.com, Electronista, Gearlog, Your Source for all things Pre, TUAW, Switched, Boy Genius Report and BusinessWeek
Loïc Le Meur / Loic Le Meur Blog:
What Larry Page thinks about Twitter — I just asked Larry Page what he thought about Twitter here is what Larry answered: — “I have always thought we needed to index the web every second to allow real time search. At first, my team laughed and did not believe me. Now they know they have to do it.
Discussion:
MediaPost, ReadWriteWeb, Elias Bizannes, WebProNews, Mark Evans, TechCrunch Europe, Bloggers Blog and Silicon Alley Insider
Kate Greene / Technology Review:
A Laptop Cooled with Ionic Wind — The thin and efficient technology could replace bulky cooling fans. — Anyone who uses a laptop will be familiar with the whir that the fan makes as it kicks in when the processor's temperature reaches around 100 °F. As laptops and other electronics …
Kevin J. O'Brien / New York Times:
Google Threatened With Sanctions Over Photo Mapping Service in Germany — BERLIN — A German data protection official on Tuesday threatened Google, the world's largest search company, with “unspecified sanctions” if the company did not change its Street View panoramic photo mapping service …
Sharon Gaudin / Computerworld:
Google News stutters for second day in a row — Glitches plague Google again; Multiple sites hit with three slowdowns in the past week — Computerworld - For the second day in a row, Google News had a glitch that derailed Google Inc.'s news aggregation site for a short time this morning.
Discussion:
The Register
Groklaw NewsPicks:
Terms of Use: A Real Difference Between Wolfram|Alpha and Google — Google and Wolfram|Alpha are providing utterly different services, and as you might expect, that means the terms of use are also utterly different. — Wolfram's Terms of Use are not at all what I would expect from a search engine …
Dean Takahashi / VentureBeat:
HP's earnings offer some evidence that downturn has run its course — Hurt just a little by the downturn, Hewlett Packard hit its expected financial targets as it reported net income fell 17 percent to $1.7 billion for the second fiscal quarter ended April 30.
Discussion:
Between the Lines, Business Week, Business Wire, alarm:clock, iTnews Australia and eWeek
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Connie Guglielmo / Bloomberg:
Hewlett-Packard Sales Forecast Falls Short on PC Drop
Hewlett-Packard Sales Forecast Falls Short on PC Drop
Discussion:
Guardian, Financial Times, New York Times, Between the Lines, TheStreet.com, Tech Trader Daily and CNET News
Lidija Davis / ReadWriteWeb:
Digg: Shouts Out, Share on Facebook and Twitter In — During Digg's Townhall (embedded below) this evening, founder Kevin Rose and CEO Jay Adelson announced that the shout feature on Digg will be removed later this week to be replaced with a new share option that will “streamline your ability to share on Facebook and Twitter.”
Discussion:
TheNextWeb.com
MG Siegler / TechCrunch:
Amazon Updates The Kindle App To Be More iPhone-ified — As a Kindle owner, I love the fact that Amazon released an iPhone app to allow me to continue reading my content even when I don't have the actual Kindle with me. Of course, the experience of reading on the iPhone's much smaller …
Discussion:
jkOnTheRun
Connie Loizos / PE Hub Blog:
The Real Deal with Peter Thiel — Earlier this week, before heading off to a business dinner, Peter Thiel gave me a call. It's not the first time we've talked, but Thiel doesn't typically rush to return phone messages, either; he doesn't have the time. As most know, the 41-year-old …
Thanks:atul
internetnews.com:
Gumblar: Biggest Threat on the Web Today? — A new trojan has grown quickly, and experts aren't mincing words in describing the danger. — A new worm is propagating across the Web, and a growing chorus security experts are warning that the Gumblar worm might be the biggest danger now facing the Net.
Jessica Dolcourt / CNET News:
RoamBi iPhone app makes data uberpretty — A data report-reader may not seem like the most exciting candidate for an iPhone app, but if you're working in the field—or are even just a numbers nut—the new RoamBi app will catch your eye. — RoamBi (short for 'roaming business intelligence') …
Rik Myslewski / The Register:
Apple patents all-seeing display — Here's looking at you, kid — Free whitepaper - Empowerment as a growth strategy — Apple was granted a flurry of patents today, including one that describes a flat-panel display that doubles as a camera. — More on that “Integrated sensing display” in a moment.
Wall Street Journal:
Who Owns Your Name on Twitter? — Social networks can be friendly places, but they are not democracies. Nor are they free markets. They are authoritarian regimes with whimsical and arbitrary rules. — Nowhere is this fact more evident than in the doling out of domain names.