Top Items:
Ina Fried / CNET News:
Thumbing Windows 7 onto Netbooks — Microsoft has shown Windows 7 running on Netbooks ever since it introduced the operating system last fall. However, helping consumers get it on their notebooks has proven more tricky. — Microsoft is considering offering Windows 7 on a thumb drive …
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Emil Protalinski / Ars Technica:
Windows 7 preorders begin in the US, Canada, and Japan (Updated x3)
Windows 7 preorders begin in the US, Canada, and Japan (Updated x3)
Discussion:
Robert X. Cringely's blog, The Tech Report, ITworld.com, Hardware 2.0, CloudAve, Softpedia News, Geekword, Engadget and Gizmodo
Philip Lam / all things Pre:
Sprint throws a punch at the iPhone and AT&T — Here we have an ad from Sprint that's directed at early 1st gen iPhone adaptors. Bringing out the fact that the Pre can run “multiple applications” and save you $1200 in the long run, that's if you drop your 1st gen iPhone and come over to Sprint for the Pre.
Discussion:
Technologizer, Engadget, Gadget Lab, InformationWeek, Edible Apple, IntoMobile, 9 to 5 Mac, MacRumors iPhone Blog and Palm Pre Cases …
David Sarno / L.A. Times Tech Blog:
Michael Jackson-related traffic doubled Twitter's update frequency, tripled Facebook's — Traffic to news sites in North America saw a massive spike as the Michael Jackson story unfolded. Times are EST. Credit: Akamai. — As the news of Michael Jackson's fate unfolded, sites around the Web felt the strain of spiking interest.
Discussion:
Digits, Technologizer, GigaOM, Macworld, Tech Check with Jim Goldman, CNET News, Silicon Alley Insider, Ars Technica, IntoMobile, VentureBeat, Webroot Threat Blog, L.A. Now, PC World, DailyTech, Contentinople, Pulse2, AppScout, BetaNews, Gizmodo, Softpedia News, Between the Lines, Search Engine Roundtable, GMSV, Twittercism, Pocket-lint.com, Black Web 2.0, The Blog Herald, Search Engine Journal, Music Ally, paidContent, Mashable!, Internet Evolution, TechCrunch, The Register, internetnews.com, TomsTechBlog.com, Twitter Status, Bits and NEWS.com.au
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Los Angeles Times:
TV misses out as gossip website TMZ reports Michael Jackson's death first
TV misses out as gossip website TMZ reports Michael Jackson's death first
Discussion:
ZDNet, Michael Jackson, DailyFinance, Michael Calderone's Blog, NY Daily News, The Awl, Romenesko, Beet.TV, L.A. Now and Wikinomics
Ted Landau / Macworld:
Bugs & Fixes: iPhone 3GS signal strength oddities — I warn you at the outset. This is not going to be one of those Bugs & Fixes with a neatly defined set of symptoms and a iron-clad solution. This one's a bit messy. Here's the deal: — Almost immediately after getting my new iPhone 3GS …
Nathania Johnson / Search Engine Watch:
Amazon Pulls the Plug on NC Associates while Google and Apple Enjoy Sweet State Tax Deals — This morning, Amazon Associates in North Carolina are awakening to some bitter news. As of today, their accounts are officially closed. This is anticipation - yes, anticipation, not the actual passage …
Eric Savitz / Tech Trader Daily:
Palm: And Now It's All About The Pre — Palm (PALM) shares are off to an impressive start this morning, confirming last night's after-hours rally, as investors celebrate a better-than-expected fiscal Q4 financial report. The quarter's results got a top-line boost from the first wave Pre shipments …
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Cyril Altmeyer / Reuters:
Google CEO says worst of crisis is over — * CEO says “reasonable to be optimistic for 2010” — * Sees U.S. recovery starting in autumn — A U.S. recovery is likely to begin this autumn, the worst of the crisis has passed and it is “reasonable to be optimistic for 2010” …
Dan Frakes / Macworld:
HP releases iPhone versions of classic calculators — Hewlett-Packard (HP) today announced iPhone-app versions of three classic HP calculators: the HP 12c, HP 12c Platinum, and HP 15C. — When run in landscape mode, each app uses the original ROM code and provides an exact visual replica …
Discussion:
CNET News, VentureBeat, jkOnTheRun, The iPhone Blog, Obsessable, The Raw Feed and MobileContentToday
MG Siegler / TechCrunch:
Who Exactly Is In Charge Of The App Store? Anyone? — Okay, the situation surrounding the App Store and its approval process continues to get weirder and weirder. — As you may have heard, an application featuring nudity first appeared in the App Store yesterday.
Discussion:
NEWSFACTOR, PC World, Contentinople, MacRumors, TorrentFreak, Gadget Lab, CrunchGear, AppAdvice and p2pnet
Jason Kincaid / TechCrunch:
Adding Insult To Injury: MySpace Botches Layoffs — When you've just gotten laid off, the last thing you want to hear is that you can't cash your last check because of one final payroll screwup. But that's apparently exactly what's going on over at MySpace, which laid off over 30% of its staff …
Zachary M. Seward / Nieman Journalism Lab:
Link from Yahoo breaks traffic records at New York Times — Behold the power of Yahoo: A link at the top of the site's front page helped send more than 9 million page views to The New York Times in the span of two hours last week, breaking records for web traffic at the newspaper.
Ben Kuchera / Ars Technica:
Mole exclusive: PS3, 360 price drops coming this fall — Our favorite inside source has given us a heads-up on what to expect from both Sony and Microsoft this year in hardware packages and pricing. The path to the holidays is a rosy one, with more hard drive space inside the systems at a lower price.
Charles Eicher / The Register:
Copyfraud: Poisoning the public domain — How web giants are stealing the future of knowledge — Special report The public domain is the greatest resource in human history: eventually all knowledge will become part of it. Its riches serve all mankind, but it faces a new threat.
Discussion:
TeleRead
Alan Cowell / New York Times:
Is Free News Really Worth the Price? — PARIS — If you are reading this, I am doing my job. — Roughly speaking, that is the compact that has underpinned the ties that bind those who write the news to those who read it. — But as the world hurtles into a digital era, other questions intrude …
Olga Kharif / Business Week:
Big Software Plans for Amazon's Kindle? — Amazon.com's buying and hiring signal that many more Kindle apps may be on the way—plus software to put Amazon books on other mobile devices — Giant online retailer Amazon.com may be plotting a broader foray into software for smartphones.
Discussion:
paidContent
Frederic Lardinois / ReadWriteWeb:
So Much for Video Conversations: Seesmic Puts Its Video Service on Hold — When you hear the name Seesmic today, chances are that you are thinking about a Twitter client, but once upon a time, Seesmic was a much-hyped online “video conversation” service. Now, however, after a recent redesign …
Joseph Bonneau / Light Blue Touchpaper:
The Economics of Privacy in Social Networks — We often think of social networking to Facebook, MySpace, and the also-rans, but in reality there are there are tons of social networks out there, dozens which have membership in the millions. Around the world it's quite a competitive market.
Alertbox:
Stop Password Masking … It's time to show most passwords in clear text as users type them. Providing feedback and visualizing the system's status have always been among the most basic usability principles. Showing undifferentiated bullets while users enter complex codes definitely fails to comply.
Robert Andrews / mocoNews:
Apple Increases Stake In UK Radio Chip Firm Imagination — Apple (NSDQ: AAPL) is tripling its stake in UK microchip firm Imagination Technologies, taking its share to 9.5 percent. Its buying 2.2 million new shares at £1.4275 each (total £3.14 million).
Discussion:
imgtec.com, The Register, CNET News, 9 to 5 Mac, Guardian, Digital Media Wire, Bloomberg, IntoMobile, Macworld UK and www.pocketgamer.biz
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Matt Marshall / VentureBeat:
Sense Networks gets $6M in hotly contested deal for “tribe” advertising — Sense Networks, a company that can track “tribes” of people — such as those who like the same bars and same movies — to better target them with instant advertising, has raised $6 million in new venture financing in a hotly contested deal.
Michael Arrington / TechCrunch:
Facebook Click Fraud 101 — Our posts earlier this week about the alarming amount of click fraud at Facebook left more than a few unanswered questions. The problem is real and was confirmed by Facebook. But what wasn't clear is exactly how or why it was happening.