Top Items:
MacTalk Australia:
Rumour: 16GB iPhone Declared “End of Life” By Vodafone & Brightpoint — We usually don't report on rumours here at MacTalk , but a trusted source has brought this to our attention this evening: Vodafone has sent out an email to retail staff stating that the 16GB iPhone has been marked as …
Discussion:
SlashGear, iLounge, Boy Genius Report, Apple iPhone Apps, Gadget Lab, AppleInsider, Unwired View, iPhone Buzz, The iPhone Blog, tinyComb, p2pnet and O'Grady's PowerPage
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Darren Murph / Engadget:
32GB iPhone placeholder appears at T-Mobile Austria — Take it for what it's worth (which may be nothing, quite honestly), but a bona fide “iPhone 32GB” placeholder has appeared in the ‘Coming Soon’ section on T-Mobile Austria's website. Generally speaking, we wouldn't give this kind of slip …
Discussion:
iPhone Buzz, iLounge, The iPhone Blog, MobileCrunch, SlashGear, Electronista, 9 to 5 Mac and Cellphone News …, Thanks:shankargan
Greg Sandoval / CNET News:
Pew Center illustrates how Craigslist is killing newspapers — It's tough to compete with free. — The use of online classifieds sites, such as Craigslist, has more than doubled in the past four years, according to a study published Friday by the Pew Research Center.
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Louis Gray:
Twitter's Search Engine Is Very, Very, Broken — Given all the rumors about Google possibly talking to Twitter about search, or the Mountain View giant taking on the world of real-time, you would think that Twitter's dramatic growth and user adoption would see the microblogging company sitting …
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Gmail Blog:
New in Labs: Inbox preview — Whenever I open up my inbox at work, I'm never surprised to find several new messages waiting to be read. The same thing can't always be said about my personal Gmail account. Sometimes I end up checking my mail only to find nothing new there. — No big deal, really.
Discussion:
Download Squad, PC World, Lifehacker, CloudAve, InformationWeek, Enterprise Irregulars, TechCrunch, geeksugar, Mashable! and AppScout, Thanks:sinkercat
James Kendrick / jkOnTheRun:
Not All Sprint Stores Carrying the Pre- Find Out Which Ones Near You Will — The frenzy is building for the Palm Pre launch and already future Pre customers are making plans for launch day. I have heard from those who plan on hitting Wal-Mart or Best Buy first, followed by a trip …
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Lee Mathews / Download Squad:
Microsoft dumps 3-app limit from Windows 7 Starter — See that little alert above? Take a good look, because if Paul Thurrott's exclusive is on target you won't be seeing it in Windows 7 Starter Edition. Believe it or not, Microsoft has done an about-face on the three simultaneous application limit.
Nate Anderson / Ars Technica:
Lawyer: RIAA must pay back all $100M it has collected — Harvard Law professor Charles Nesson is branching out. — For years he watched with horror as the RIAA demanded money from tens of thousands of Americans, finally getting into the ring himself when federal judge Nancy Gertner connected …
Bambi Francisco / VatorNews:
Ron Conway: I'm not on Twitter or Facebook — ...and Conway's thoughts on mobile investing, Apple, Digg, AdMob, IPOs and M&A — Mobile advertising is as one Advertising Age writer put it: This great white whale that is forever on the horizon but perpetually out of reach.
Mike Musgrove / Washington Post:
It's Made of 100% Cotton; Its Sales Are 99% Ironic — Something strange happened this week in Amazon.com's apparel section. — For a day or two, a black T-shirt featuring an image of three wolves baying at a full moon claimed the top slot at the online store's clothing bestseller list …
Adrian Kingsley-Hughes / Hardware 2.0:
First look: Google Chrome 2.0 - Fast but lacking features — Google has released Chrome 2.0. The speed-demon browser gets an additional kick of speed, a few more features, and a load of bug fixes. — First, let's look at the speed side of things. Google's Chrome browser was already fast …
David Chartier / Macworld:
More senseless iPhone app rejections tarnish the App Store — The App Store is becoming almost as famous for rejecting applications as it is for selling one billion of them. The iPhone app body count has recently grown by two, including a high-profile e-book reader and a compatibility update …
Daisy Whitney / Hollywood Reporter:
Google invades upfront marketplace — Deutsch, Saatchi among agencies using Google TV Ads — SAN FRANCISCO — Google TV Ads has begun booking upfront deals with major agencies and advertisers for the first time. — Marketers are committing upwards of seven figures to buy ads through …
Discussion:
CNET News, Forbes, NewTeeVee, MediaMemo, Silicon Alley Insider, Beet.TV and Company Town
John Gruber / Daring Fireball:
The Next iPhone — In the summer of 1994, I landed a college internship as a programmer at a DOS/Windows development shop. There were maybe 20 full-time programmers on the team, and, when I joined, they were nearing the end of a two-year-long project to port their flagship DOS app to Windows.
Discussion:
Technologizer, PC World, Ars Technica, Gadget Lab, Contentinople, Silicon Alley Insider, TUAW, MacDailyNews, iLounge, Ubergizmo, www.pocketgamer.biz, Edible Apple, TechCrunch, 9 to 5 Mac, VentureBeat and The iPhone Blog, Thanks:atul
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Saul Hansell / Bits:
Counting Down to the End of Moore's Law — “We're looking at a brick wall five years down the road,” Eli Harari, the chief executive of SanDisk, said to me earlier this week. — In 1990, when SanDisk, which he founded, shipped its first generation of flash memory — the sort …
Mary Jo Foley / All about Microsoft:
Report: Microsoft readies new maximum specs for Windows 7 netbooks — Microsoft is readying a set of maximum specs for Windows 7 netbooks -or, as Microsoft prefers to call them, “small notebooks” — that will likely dictate which PCs will qualify for lower per-copy Windows 7 pricing.
Discussion:
Technologizer, Fast Company, Softpedia News, Enterprise Irregulars, Gizmodo, Ubergizmo and CloudAve
MG Siegler / TechCrunch:
Easily Create Your Own Feed Bundles Of Joy With Google Reader — Perhaps the biggest barrier to entry to using a feed reader for most people is building up a collection of good feeds. Sure, you can import someone else's OPML file, but most people have no idea what that means, let alone how to do it.
Discussion:
Google Operating System, Official Google Reader Blog, Lifehacker, TECH.BLORGE.com and TheNextWeb.com
Caroline McCarthy / CNET News:
Facebook tell-all ‘Accidental Billionaires’ on sale in July — This one sure snuck up on us: “The Accidental Billionaires,” author Ben Mezrich's presumably tawdry take on Facebook's origins, is hitting bookshelves on July 14. — Last we'd heard, it was getting released this fall.
Discussion:
The Daily Beast
Eric Eldon / VentureBeat:
Facebook simplifies currency ahead of wider roll-out — Credits, Facebook's nascent virtual currency of sorts, is getting a simple change tonight. The company is marking down items in its gift store from 100 credits to 10 credits, and reducing users' corresponding number of credits.
Discussion:
CNET News
Orlando Sentinel:
Are astronaut's space ‘tweets’ cheats? — NASA astronaut Mike Massimino uses a laptop aboard shuttle Atlantis this week. NASA says he is the first to tweet from space. He typed his tweets as e-mails from this laptop, and once sent to the ground, a NASA employee in Houston posted them to his Twitter account.
Daniel Shen / DigiTimes:
Sony Ericsson prepping Android 2.0 smartphones — Sony Ericsson is preparing to launch Google phones running on Android 2.0 operating system (OS), according to Peter Ang, vice president of marketing, Asia Pacific at Sony Ericsson. — The Android 2.0 will have more multimedia support that the previous Android OS, Ang explained.
Kevin J. O'Brien / New York Times:
Microsoft Antitrust Hearing in Europe Canceled — BERLIN — Microsoft and the European Commission have canceled the only hearing planned in an antitrust investigation into the company's Internet browser because of a dispute over the attendance of European regulators serving as advisers.
Discussion:
Digital Daily, paidContent, InformationWeek, Softpedia News, Techgeist, TechSpot and The Register
Steve Grove / Google Public Policy Blog:
The U.S. Government comes to YouTube — Spacemen floating through the international space station. World leaders sending messages across borders. A life-sized slice of pizza explaining how to apply for a passport. Sound like outtakes from the latest Hollywood movies?
Discussion:
Tech Daily Dose, WebProNews, WatchingTV Online, InformationWeek and Quick Online Tips, Thanks:atul
Andy Greenberg / Forbes:
Pentagon Seeks High School Hackers — As a cyber space race looms, the military is looking for a few good geeks. — High school hackers, crackers and digital deviants: Uncle Sam wants you. — As part of a government information security review released as early as Friday …
Discussion:
CircleID
New York Times:
Intel and Competition — As American regulators slept through the past eight years, several authorities overseas decided that the Intel Corporation has been abusing its near monopoly position in the microchip market to squeeze out its smaller rival Advanced Micro Devices, constraining consumers' choice.
Thanks:atul
Bobbie Johnson / Guardian:
‘Gumblar’ PC virus targets Google users, warn experts — Concern grows as malware mutates and infects websites — A computer virus that targets Google users is mutating rapidly, turning it into what some are calling the biggest threat to online security today.
Discussion:
Unmask Parasites. Blog.