Top Items:
Peter Kafka / MediaMemo:
Apple's iTunes Pitch: TV for $30 a Month — Would you pay $30 a month to watch TV via iTunes? — That's the pitch Apple has been making to TV networks in recent weeks. The company is trying to round up support for a monthly subscription service that would deliver TV programs via its multimedia software, multiple sources tell me.
Discussion:
VentureBeat, BusinessWeek, Technologizer, PC World, Digital Daily, Between the Lines, Engadget, Webomatica, Forbes, Gizmodo, NBC Bay Area, Fast Company, the Econsultancy blog, CrunchGear, Mashable!, Macworld, GeekBrief.TV, The Next Web, fierceonlinevideo.com …, The Mac Observer, TheAppleBlog, TUAW, NewTeeVee, 9 to 5 Mac, GigaOM, Telecompetitor, Neowin.net, I4U News, paidContent, Podcasting News, AppleInsider, Switched, ChannelWeb, DVICE, TECH.BLORGE.com, Electronista, Edible Apple, eHomeUpgrade, The Tech Report, Silicon Alley Insider, Pocket-lint.com, blogs.chron.com, DSLreports, Macsimum News, MacRumors, EverythingiCafe, Tech Trader Daily, iLounge, LOOPRumors, TechVi and Smalltalk Tidbits …
Boy Genius Report:
Verizon to aim for the smartphone crown — One of our really solid connects just had some information for us and we think you're going to love it. With the Motorola DROID being Verizon's hot handset at the moment, you'd figure that the Moto would be it for a while, right?
RELATED:
Galen Gruman / InfoWorld:
Want a Droid for work e-mail? It'll cost you extra — Accessing Exchange e-mail over the new ‘iPhone killer’ costs an extra $15 per month — The industry is abuzz over the Motorola Droid, the first Google Android 2.0-based smartphone, to be released on Friday, Nov. 6, in the United States …
Mark Pincus Blog:
My take on zynga and cpa offers — Michael Arrington posted over the weekend about CPA offers within social games and questioned why facebook, myspace, zynga and others would expose these to our users. He raises good points about ‘scammy’ advertisers and the bad user experience they create.
Discussion:
Virtual Goods News, Gawker, TechCrunch, Andrew Chen, All Facebook and Computerworld, Thanks:dmac1
RELATED:
Michael Arrington / TechCrunch:
Zynga Takes Steps To Remove Scams From Games — Well that didn't take long. We outlined the not-so-ethical ways that the big social gaming startups are generating revenue through lead gen scams and subscriptions through a series of posts over the last week.
Discussion:
Kindle Review
MG Siegler / TechCrunch:
Twitter Reveals More Lists Power With A Widget — Since it was turned on for all users late last week, everyone is talking about Twitter's new Lists feature. Most people seem to like it, but some have no idea what it's good for. Perhaps those people will understand a bit more about Lists potential …
RELATED:
Frederic Lardinois / ReadWriteWeb:
Seesmic Adds Support for Twitter Lists
Seesmic Adds Support for Twitter Lists
Discussion:
bub.blicio.us, TechCrunch, louisgray.com, Mashable!, Geek.com, NPR Blogs, Download Squad and Regular Geek
Mike Masnick / Techdirt:
60 Minutes Puts Forth Laughable, Factually Incorrect MPAA Propaganda On Movie Piracy — 31 years ago, in 1978, the television program 60 Minutes put on an episode about the awful threat of “video piracy” to the movie industry. Featuring the MPAA's Jack Valenti, the episode focused …
Discussion:
TorrentFreak
Alex Chitu / Google Operating System:
Preview Google's Search Results — Google added a new option to the web search toolbelt: page previews. If you click on “Show options” and select “Page previews” after performing a search, Google will show a longer snippet and a thumbnail for each search result.
David Mendez / OS X Daily:
Hackintosh Netbook users take note: Snow Leopard 10.6.2 update kills support for Atom Processor — It's not out in the wild yet, but 10.6.2 has been confirmed to kill support for the Intel Atom processor, this is especially important for Hackintosh users who have hacked various Atom based netbooks to run Snow Leopard.
Discussion:
Computerworld, Engadget, Ars Technica, internetnews.com, TheAppleBlog, OSNews, AppleInsider, SlashGear, Mobility Site, TechSpot, CrunchGear, Technologizer, PC World, TUAW, Gadget Lab, Liliputing, GottaBeMobile.com, TG Daily, Macsimum News, The Mac Observer, Electronista, jkOnTheRun, 9 to 5 Mac, ChannelWeb, MacRumors, GigaLaw.com Daily News, Lifehacker, Download Squad, Edible Apple, Gizmodo, Gearlog, TechVi, Softpedia News, Technovia and digg.com
Elke Michlmayr / The Official Google Blog:
Google Search by voice travels the world, finds Nokia, learns Chinese — (Cross-posted from the Google Mobile Blog) — Google Search by voice has grown up quickly. Some might say that search by voice has matured from a toddler to a tween. It's certainly been traveling across …
Tom Krazit / CNET News:
Google: You too could win millions in stock — Google is once again dangling incentives before engineers. — The company threw open its doors Monday to the engineering community Monday, announcing that it granted a Founders' Prize—"a multimillion-dollar stock bonus"—to the team that developed Google Chrome.
Anthony Ha / VentureBeat:
Greylock Partners recruits LinkedIn's Reid Hoffman, raises $575M fund — Reid Hoffman, the founder and chairman of popular professional networking site LinkedIn, is joining venture firm Greylock Partners as an investing partner. The firm also announced today that it has raised a $575 million fund, its thirteenth.
Discussion:
Pulse2, TechCrunch, PE Hub Blog, VatorNews, paidContent, Silicon Alley Insider and silicontap.com
Ina Fried / CNET News:
Inside one of the world's largest data centers — CHICAGO—On the outside, Microsoft's massive new data center resembles the other buildings in the industrial area. — Even the inside of the building doesn't look like that much. The ground floor looks like a large indoor parking lot filled with a few parked trailers.
Discussion:
Neowin.net
Dina Bass / Bloomberg:
Microsoft Trims Price of E-Mail Service, Aiming to Block Google's Inroads — Nov. 2 (Bloomberg) — Microsoft Corp., the world's largest software maker, will cut the price it charges customers to store and run their e-mail systems, a bid to keep Google Inc. from making inroads in the market.
Google Chrome Blog:
Bookmark sync and more speed in the latest beta release — Fresh from a Halloween weekend, we're excited to introduce a brand new beta for Google Chrome, which includes a few new treats and cool tricks for our users. — For those of you who use several computers — for example …
Cade Metz / The Register:
Yahoo! open sources uber web server — ‘400-terabytes-a-day’ Traffic Server lands at Apache — Yahoo! has open sourced the back-end software platform that underpins the company's webmail client and countless other applications offered up across its sweeping web portal.
Dan Cohen / Gear Diary:
Adobe To iPhone Users- “Want Flash? Don't Blame Us” — This might not be new but I certainly don't recall seeing this message before... I went to watch something on my iPhone earlier and couldn't. Turns out it was flash and, as you likely know, the iPhone doesn't support flash. That's nothing new.
Discussion:
Engadget, MacRumors iPhone Blog, Macworld, Mobilewhack.com, App Advice, 9 to 5 Mac, Gizmodo and digg.com
Google Wave Developer Blog:
WaveSandbox.com: Federate This — When we first unveiled Google Wave a few months ago, one of the fundamental concepts we discussed was the vision for wave as an open communications protocol. We are happy to announce that the developer instance of Google Wave is now available …
Bill Carter / New York Times:
DVR, Once TV's Mortal Foe, Helps Ratings — In what may seem a media business version of the Stockholm syndrome, television network executives have fallen in love with a former tormentor: the digital video recorder. — The reason is not simply that more households own DVRs …
Marshall Kirkpatrick / ReadWriteWeb:
New Netvibes Will Be World's Biggest Real-Time Feed Reader — The next version of popular web dashboard service Netvibes will push “near real-time” updates from feeds to the browser, a dramatic change in how the service works. Those feeds will be served up along with the standard suite …
Michael Santo / Alice Hill's Real Tech News:
Kingston, Paramount Team Up on Movie Delivery Via Flash Memory — Remember the slotMusic format? That is a different way of deliveriing music, using microSD cards instead of CDs. With flash memory prices continuing to drop, it was only a matter of time until movies and DVDs would start being delivered the same way.
Sarah Lyall / New York Times:
A Tweet Unleashes Vitriol on a User in Britain — LONDON — In the realm of Twitter insults, it was at the far end of mild. “Much as I admire and adore the chap, they are a bit ... boring,” a Twitter user called brumplum wrote Saturday, speaking of the tweets of Stephen Fry, the British writer, actor and television personality.
Discussion:
TECH.BLORGE.com, Guardian, Plum's plums, Switched, broadstuff, Internet Evolution and Telegraph, Thanks:mrinaldesai
Callie Kimball / Epicenter:
Exclusive: How I Unmasked @FakeAPStylebook (an Only-on-Twitter Story) — If Twitter is an information-based economy, inside scoop is its currency. How I came to know the real identity of @FakeAPStylebook is one of those only-on-Twitter stories, a choice accident of happenstance.
Thanks:atul
Philip Elmer-DeWitt / Brainstorm Tech:
The iPhone dons a suit and tie — IT departments are finally starting to buy Apple's smartphone, says a Deutsche Bank report — Click to enlarge. Source: Deutsche Bank — “There is growing evidence that the iPhone is making inroads into the Enterprise,” writes Deutsche Bank research …
George Ou / Digital Society:
Analysis of BitTorrent uTP congestion avoidance — The story that the new BitTorrent client uTorrent 2.0 is “network friendly” is making the top headlines on the Web and mailing lists. The only problem with this story it that it has no actual data to back up its assertions.
Leena Rao / TechCrunch:
Cisco Shells Out $44.5 Million For Set-Top Box Unit Of Chinese Cable Company DVN — Cisco is at it again. The company is acquiring the set-top box business of one of China's largest cable companies, DVN, for $44.5 million. This is peanuts compared to Cisco's latest acquisitions including …
Claudine Beaumont / Telegraph:
Web could run out of addresses next year warn web experts — Businesses urgently need to upgrade to IPv6, a new version of the internet's addressing protocol that will hugely increase the number of available addresses. — A survey, conducted by the European Commission …
Discussion:
Mashable!