Top Items:
Jonny Evans / 9 to 5 Mac:
Apple execs book flight time for mystery product, ‘not iPhone’, bafflement follows — We're deciphering Apple executives and their fourth quarter statements right now - but the initial take away at this stage is the company's mysterious admission that “air freight costs” are set to rise “abnormally” in the company's first quarter.
RELATED:
Anthony Ha / VentureBeat:
Apple's Tim Cook scoffs at iPhone competitors — The iPhone was the hot new thing a year or two ago, but now it's seeing increasing competition from Google, Palm, and others — for example, my editor Matt Marshall just declared that he's abandoning his iPhone for Droid, the Android phone coming at the end of the month.
Apple:
Apple Reports Fourth Quarter Results — Most Profitable Quarter Ever; Record Mac and iPhone Sales — Apple today announced financial results for its fiscal 2009 fourth quarter ended September 26, 2009. The Company posted revenue of $9.87 billion and a net quarterly profit of $1.67 billion, or $1.82 per diluted share.
Discussion:
TechCrunch, New York Times, Mobilewhack.com, Macworld, Ars Technica, The Microsoft Blog, GigaOM, Bloomberg, Engadget, OSNews, Wall Street Journal, paidContent, Pocket-lint.com, AppleInsider, IntoMobile, mocoNews, Computerworld, InformationWeek, The Next Web, The SiliconANGLE, MacRumors, Epicenter, Digital Daily, CNET News, TechFlash, eWeek, Gizmodo, TidBITS, DailyTech, jkOnTheRun, Kindle Review, Brainstorm Tech, iLounge, Between the Lines, Edible Apple, Erictric, VentureBeat, PhoneDog.com, iPhone Savior, TechSpot, Neowin.net, EE Times and Internet2Go
AppleInsider:
Apple profits surge 46% on record sales of 3M Macs, 7.4M iPhones — Apple said Monday that fourth-quarter profits rose more than 46 percent to 1.67 billion, or $1.82 per diluted share, on sales of $9.87 billion for the three-month period ended September 26, 2009.
Tim Conneally / BetaNews:
The new iPod nano: A flop? — The good news in Apple's earnings call this afternoon, according to CFO Peter Oppenheimer, is that the Cupertino company has sold more Macs and iPhones than it ever has in the past, beating previous Mac sales records by 444,000 or 17% year over year …
Ross Miller / Engadget:
Barnes & Noble ‘Nook’ e-reader with color touchscreen out Tuesday for $259, says WSJ (update: Best Buy connection?) — Looks like the cat's out of the bag. The Wall Street Journal's had a glimpse at what it says is an upcoming ad for Barnes & Noble's impending announcement …
Discussion:
New York Times, The Noisy Channel, Electronista, CrunchGear, Wall Street Journal, GottaBeMobile.com, Crave, Gizmodo and Maximum PC
Kevin Michaluk / CrackBerry.com blogs:
First Images: BlackBerry Watch is FOR REAL! — * Update - Just to be clear as I've seen some confusion in the commments, but as far as we know at this time the inPulse watch is not being made by/for BlackBerry (it won't feature a BlackBerry logo), but is being made for use with BlackBerry Smartphones.
Discussion:
Engadget, ITworld.com, MobileCrunch, BerryReview.com, Gizmodo, BlackBerry Cool, Phone Arena, jkOnTheRun, I4U News, IntoMobile, PhoneDog.com, Gadgetell, Mobilewhack.com, Erictric, Electronista and DVICE
Jeff Aguero / The Official Google Blog:
Flying in a WiFi wonderland: Free Internet from Google on Virgin America flights — We know the holiday season seems to come earlier every year (sorry, Halloween), but before you make your final travel plans, we're excited to let you know that we're partnering with Virgin America …
Discussion:
Wi-Fi Networking News, VatorNews, IntoMobile, The Register, InformationWeek, Technologizer, DSLreports, Internet2Go, Maximum PC, Switched, Mashable!, Softpedia News, I4U News, The SiliconANGLE, dailywireless.org, Search Engine Watch and TechCrunch, Thanks:jungleg
Simon Willison / Simon Willison's Weblog:
This shouldn't be the image of Hack Day — I love hack days. I was working in the vicinity of Chad Dickerson when he organised the first internal Yahoo! Hack Day back in 2005, and I've since participated in hack day events at Yahoo!, Global Radio and the Guardian.
Discussion:
BoomTown, VentureBeat, Yahoo! Developer Network Blog, Villagers with Pitchforks and Gawker
Mark Milian / L.A. Times Tech Blog:
A Twitter hole lets you Google protected tweets — You can find just about anything with a Google search. That includes status updates on many Twitter profiles that were supposed to be private. — Some Twitter users lock their profiles from public view by checking a box on their settings page.
Ben Parr / Mashable!:
LEAKED: Details of the Facebook Home Page Redesign [Screenshots] — A few weeks ago, we caught wind that Facebook was testing a new homepage design. Screenshots revealed a few interesting changes, such as a decrease in size for the Facebook Publisher box and a new, Friendfeed-like “Top News” filter for the news feed.
Craig Newmark / The Huffington Post:
A Nerd's Take On The Future Of News Media — There are a lot of new technologies which already affect news consumption and future business models. As a nerd, I'm excited by the new tech, particularly mobile, including new display systems and pervasive connectivity.
Knot Pipatsrisawat / Facebook Blog:
Giving Groups a Stronger Voice — Facebook Groups have long been a part of the Facebook experience as a way for people to organize and discuss particular issues of interest. However, until now, Group activities have been isolated to the group page and it was often difficult to find out what currently was going on within a group.
Discussion:
Inside Facebook, The SiliconANGLE, VentureBeat, CNET News, All Facebook, TechCrunch and AppScout
John Carney / Silicon Alley Insider:
Do Rajaratnam's Google Trades Really Amount To Insider Trading? — There is room for doubt about whether trades that Raj Rajaratnam made in the stock of Google really count as prohibited insider trading. — But the Second Circuit, which will be overseeing the case against Rajaratnam …
Discussion:
TechFlash
RELATED:
Michael Arrington / TechCrunch:
Photobucket To Be Valued At $60 Million In Sale To Ontela — Lots more details are coming in on the Photobucket fire sale by MySpace/News Corp. The sale is all but complete, say new sources. And the buyer is definitely Washington state based Ontela. — Ontela, a mobile photo upload …
Caroline McCarthy / CNET News:
Twitter hits five billion tweets — Former Current Media executive Robin Sloan appears to have posted Twitter's five billionth tweet, in the form of a reply to another user that otherwise read only “Oh lord.” — The landmark status of Sloan's tweet, which he has nicknamed “The Pentagigatweet …
Daniel Terdiman / CNET News:
Internet Archive's BookServer could ‘dominate’ Amazon — SAN FRANCISCO—An initiative in the works from the nonprofit Internet Archive to centralize the electronic distribution of commercially viable books could upend the publishing industry and declaw Amazon.com, an industry analyst said.
Discussion:
The Register
Nilay Patel / Engadget:
Apple to introduce host of new machines, new multitouch input devices tomorrow? — We're not sure why John Gruber and Dan Lyons are having some sort of megalomaniacal Apple super-pundit standoff, but we'll sit here and take the spoils: Gruber's just one-upped Lyons's earlier vague tease …
springdesign.com:
Spring Design Announces Dual-Screen, — Google Android-based E-book Reader, Hyperlinking Text with Multimedia — Secondary color touchscreen supplements text with web-based or any linked multimedia content; Enables users to enhance original text with their own embedded video, audio, photos and notes
Discussion:
paidContent, PC World, NEWSFACTOR, Gadgetell, Android and Me, Venture Capital Dispatch, Chip Chick, GigaOM, T3.com News, Engadget, The Toybox, Fast Company, jkOnTheRun, The Seattle Times, Gadget Lab, DVICE, Digital Trends, blogs.ft.com, OhGizmo!, TechSpot, internetnews.com, I4U News, Gizmodo, Gearlog and ReadWriteWeb
Tom Krazit / CNET News:
Ad agencies stump for Microsoft-Yahoo search deal — An advertising industry association—backed by four of the world's largest ad agencies—sent a letter to the Department of Justice Monday endorsing the Microsoft-Yahoo search deal, saying it “enhances competition.”
Tom Abate / San Francisco Chronicle:
Tech exports down this year - bottom unclear — Tech exports are down nationwide so far this year and it's not yet clear whether they have started to turn up, according to a report being issued today by a technology industry association. — In issuing its “Trade in the Cyberstates” report …
Noah Shachtman / Danger Room:
Exclusive: U.S. Spies Buy Stake in Firm That Monitors Blogs, Tweets — America's spy agencies want to read your blog posts, keep track of your Twitter updates — even check out your book reviews on Amazon. — In-Q-Tel, the investment arm of the CIA and the wider intelligence community …
Matt Asay / The Open Road:
EU's MySQL inquiry may backfire for open source — It takes time, leadership, and a fair amount of luck to successfully build an open-source community. It also takes money. Lots of it, if IBM's $1 billion commitment to Linux is any indication. — Unfortunately, the return …
Steven Levy / Wired News:
Mob Rule! How Users Took Over Twitter — Last August, the people who putatively run Twitter — the small crew that three years ago launched the world's fastest-growing communications medium — announced a relatively minor change in the way the site functions.
Jacqueline Emigh / Computerworld:
Apple Restores Banned 3G TV iPhone App — In another episode in an apparent series of developer-friendly moves, Apple seems to have unbanned a previously banned 3G TV iPhone application over the weekend. — In another episode in an apparent series of developer-friendly moves …
Ryan Paul / Ars Technica:
SCO fires CEO Darl McBride, architect of litigation strategy — In an SEC filing published today, SCO revealed that CEO Darl McBride has been terminated and is no longer with the company. The decision to fire the controversial CEO is part of a restructuring plan that is based on recommendations …
Diane Bartz / Reuters:
Fake security software in millions of computers: Symantec — WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Tens of millions of U.S. computers are loaded with scam security software that their owners may have paid for but which only makes the machines more vulnerable, according to a new Symantec report on cybercrime.
Discussion:
Neowin.net