Top Items:
Joshua Topolsky / Engadget:
Exclusive: first Google Phone / Nexus One photos, Android 2.1 on-board — Well here you have it folks, honest-to-goodness pics of the Google Phone... AKA, the Nexus One. As you can see by the photos, the design of the device is largely similar to those we've seen, but the graphic …
Discussion:
CNET News, Computerworld, Mobile Magazine, atmaspheric, techblog.dallasnews.com, TeleRead, Fone Arena, PreCentral.net, Android and Me, AndroidGuys, Charles Hudson's Weblog, Gizmodo, Switched, TheStreet.com, Mobile Industry Review, Lifehacker, 9 to 5 Mac, Mashable!, dailywireless.org and Android Central, Thanks:atul
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Sascha Segan / PC Magazine:
Why So Many Are So Wrong on the ‘Google Phone’ — Google on Saturday announced that its internal developers are using a new Android-powered phone that many Web sites have dubbed “Nexus One” from its Internet browser identification string, but which many reports say is a variant of HTC's HD2 phone.
Discussion:
Network World, GigaOM, GMSV, All about Microsoft, The Atlantic Business Channel, TechFlash, jkOnTheRun, Gearlog and MacDailyNews
Thomas Ricker / Engadget:
HTC Nexus One blessed by the FCC (updated) — Well lookie here. A little phone by the name of “NEXUSONE” just slipped through the FCC as model number PB99100 built by HTC. The filing also confirms a few more details including microSD expansion, 802.11b/g WiFi, and Bluetooth 2.1 + EDR.
Discussion:
Search Engine Land, The Toybox, Softpedia News, IntoMobile, Gizmodo, wireless goodness, Telegraph, I4U News, Pocket-lint.com, SlashGear, AndroidGuys, eWeek, Electronista, Fast Company and Android Central
Reuters:
Google phone with T-Mobile contract in January: source — FRANKFURT/SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) - Google Inc will sell a version of its own-branded cellphone for a reduced price to U.S. consumers who agree to a service contract from Deutsche Telekom's T-Mobile USA, a source familiar with the matter said.
Discussion:
Android and Me, Technologizer, TmoNews, IntoMobile, AndroidGuys, Android Phone Fans and Gadgetell
Peter Kafka / MediaMemo:
Google Pals Up With T-Mobile to Push Its “Nexus One” Phone
Google Pals Up With T-Mobile to Push Its “Nexus One” Phone
Discussion:
PC World, Silicon Alley Insider, Computerworld, LinuxInsider, Erictric, Tech Trader Daily, Mashable!, ARMdevices.net, Android Phone Fans, FierceWireless, AppleInsider, AndroidGuys, Obsessable, New York Times, BoomTown, Gadget Lab, Between the Lines, Electronista, DSLreports, Andy Beal's Marketing Pilgrim, Googling Google and Internet2Go
The Official Google Blog:
Making URLs shorter for Google Toolbar and FeedBurner — This morning, we launched updated versions of the Google Toolbar and FeedBurner that offer a new URL shortening service from Google called the Google URL Shortener. We mentioned our URL shortener as a feature in both announcements …
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Eric Eldon / Inside Facebook:
Facebook Testing New URL Shortener, fb.me — URL shorteners, like bit.ly, have become a popular way for people to share links on Twitter while taking up as few of the allotted 140 characters as possible. But saving space is just one of the benefits that shorteners provide.
Leena Rao / TechCrunch:
Bit.ly Just Got Fu.kd: Facebook And Google Get Into The Short URL Game — Moments after we heard reports of Facebook's new URL shortener, Google launched its own service, aptly called goo.gl. — At the moment, its only being used for Google Toolbar and Feedburner.
Discussion:
The Official Google Blog
Emma Barnett / Telegraph:
Marissa Mayer: An omnivorous Google is coming — Marissa Mayer, Google's vice president for search products and user experience, shares her unparalleled insights into the future of internet search engines. — The next big breakout area for Google is going to be language, according to Marissa Mayer.
Jim Dalrymple / CNET News:
Apple apologizes for iMac delays — Apple on Sunday apologized to customers amid reports of shipping delays of its recently introduced iMac computer. — “The new iMac has been a huge hit and we are working hard to fulfill orders as quickly as possible,” an Apple spokesperson told CNET.
Discussion:
Macworld, AppleInsider, eWeek, TheAppleBlog, The Toybox, O'Grady's PowerPage, Gadget Lab, Digital Daily, Silicon Alley Insider, Softpedia News, GMSV and Engadget
The Official Google Blog:
Cloud apps, big city: LA goes Google — This fall we've seen lots of government agencies decide to make the switch to cloud computing, joining the many businesses already using Google Apps for email and collaboration at work. Today we'd like to officially welcome another customer to the mix: the City of Los Angeles.
Discussion:
Google Enterprise Blog, eWeek, MediaPost, TechCrunch, Softpedia News, Mashable!, InformationWeek, 901am and Erictric
TeliaSonera:
TeliaSonera first in the world with 4G services — Today, as the first operator in the world, TeliaSonera launches 4G services commercially to customers in Stockholm, Sweden and Oslo, Norway. — “We are very proud to be the first operator in the world to offer our customers 4G services.
Discussion:
BBC, IntoMobile, Computerworld, Communications …, eWeek, Engadget, The Register, Fone Arena, dailywireless.org, Semiaccurate.com recent …, TechCrunch, GigaOM, Pocket-lint.com, Electronista and CNET News
Market Wire:
Oracle Makes Commitments to Customers, Developers and Users of MySQL — Oracle (NASDAQ: ORCL) has engaged in constructive discussions with the European Commission regarding the concerns expressed by the Commission about the Oracle/Sun Microsystems transaction, and in particular the maintenance …
AdSense for Feeds:
Socializing your feed with Twitter — Sometimes you reach across the hedgerow to share with your nearby neighbors. Other times, members of the household move away and yet you can't keep from calling to remind them to wear a hat and such because it's chilly out.
Michael Arrington / TechCrunch:
The Unofficial Google Text-To-Speech API — Last month Google unveiled enhancements to Google Translate. Among the new features was a simple text-to-speech function. You can try it out, or watch this video to see how it works (skip to 0:45). — There's no official API for the text-to-speech service.
Matt Buchanan / Gizmodo:
Fuse: What Your Next Touch Phone Is Going to Feel Like — Fuse is what Synaptics—who probably made the trackpad you're swirling your finger on, and maybe your phone's touchscreen—says the next generation of touch phones will be like: You'll be squeezing, touching and stroking the phone, all over.
Discussion:
Synaptics, SlashGear, Technologizer, Mobile Whack, Engadget, VentureBeat, IntoMobile and Electronista
ai.rs blog:
HTC Legend not a legend anymore — ai.rs blog Exclusive — As we promised, we bring you more info on HTC Legend. In fact, we present you exclusive crystal clear image of the upcoming Android phone from HTC. We suppose it will replace Hero, considering the dimensions, screen size and specs.
Discussion:
Gizmodo, I4U News, Phone Arena, Android Phone Fans, GPS Obsessed, SlashGear and Pocket-lint.com
Yukari Iwatani Kane / Digits:
App Watch: Exploiting the iPhone Lock Screen — Most iPhone app developers work with Apple to get their products in the iPhone App Store, submitting software for the company's approval. But a community of maverick developers sidesteps that process to target iPhones that have been modified-or …
Jennifer Van Grove / Mashable!:
iPhone Users Urged to Take Down AT&T — Apparently, AT&T CEO Ralph de la Vega's recent remarks concerning the carrier's plans to “incentivize” mobile data hogs to cut back on their usage rates aren't sitting well with AT&T customers. Shocker. — Fake Steve Jobs, for one, has had enough of AT&T's excuses.
Alex Wilhelm / The Next Web Network:
Microsoft Blatantly Steals From Startup? - Plurk Stunned and Confused — I am not sure what to make of this one. Plurk, a very promising social networking startup is claiming that Microsoft (you read that right), has been involved with “blatant theft of code, design, and UI elements.”
Discussion:
Technologizer, TechCrunch, CNET News, Digits, ITworld.com, Bits, Plurk Labs, Neowin.net, Within Windows, Forever Geek, 140Char, Erictric and Silicon Alley Insider
Fred / A VC:
Why Social Beats Search — That's a controversial post headline and I don't mean that social will always beat search, but there's a rising chorus out there about “content farms” and search optimized content creation that is worth touching on. — Arrington started it when he posted about “the end of hand crafted content”.
Discussion:
BuzzMachine, cdixon.org, Sexy Widget, Scott Rosenberg's Wordyard and Silicon Alley Insider
Nilay Patel / Engadget:
Barnes & Noble Nook torn down and rooted — but still respected — Barnes & Noble might be pitching the Nook to the literary set, but it turns out the Android-based dual-screen reader is pretty hacker-friendly as well: both the OS and filesystem are stored on a microSD card.
Todd Spangler / Multichannel News:
Can TiVo Reinvent Itself? — DVR Pioneer Needs Help — Fast — From Cable Operators to Survive — TiVo president and CEO Tom Rogers says he doesn't run a DVR company. — This is odd, since TiVo is synonymous with the digital video recorder — a technology that, in the last decade …
Times of London:
Spinvox nears £92m takeover — SPINVOX, the troubled technology firm, is close to accepting a $150m (£92m) takeover offer from an American rival. — A sale to Nuance Communications, the speech-recognition group, could be announced before Christmas.
Dan Goodin / The Register:
Hackers declare war on international forensics tool — Microsoft's COFEE decaffeinated — Hackers have released software they say sabotages a suite of forensics utilities provided for free by Microsoft to hundreds of law enforcement agencies across the globe.
Discussion:
Threat Level
BetaNews:
The case in favor of the open source enterprise database — Linux and open source middleware JBoss has made its mark in the enterprise, and it is just a matter of time before open source becomes mainstream in other functional parts of the IT infrastructure as well.
MG Siegler / TechCrunch:
Location's Social Paradox — There's an absolute eruption of activity around location-based services right now. Companies are getting funded left and right, new ones are popping up daily, and certain ones are seemingly starting to take off. But for a number of them, there's a very big wall looming.