Top Items:
Robin Wauters / MobileCrunch:
Android Market grows up, hits 20,000 apps milestone — Rest assured that 2010 is going to be a big year for the Android operating system, with many new handsets finding their way to stores around the world (including Google's own phone) and an increasing number of developers building tools …
Discussion:
I4U News, AndroidGuys, PMP Today, Mashable!, Electronista, GottaBeMobile.com, Android Central, Pocket-lint.com and AppScout
bit.ly blog:
Announcing bit.ly Pro — Today we're pleased to announce a new service: bit.ly Pro. The Pro service provides custom short URLs powered by bit.ly. Publishers and bloggers will be able to use their own short domain names to point to pages on their sites. — As part of our initial beta program …
Discussion:
Computerworld, TechCrunch, Silicon Alley Insider, VentureBeat, Softpedia News, The Next Web Network, Andy Beal's Marketing Pilgrim, Mashable!, AdSense for Feeds and AppScout, Thanks:atul
RELATED:
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 …
Discussion:
eWeek, GMSV, Mashable!, The Apple Core, Bits, Epicenter, Softpedia News, Russell Beattie, mediabistro.com, Telegraph, I4U News, Regular Geek, Forever Geek, Pocket-lint.com, TechCrunch, Saad Kamal, FierceCIO News, Neowin.net, Switched, Search Engine Watch, WebProNews, Search Engine Roundtable, Inside Facebook, Screenwerk, PC World, Ubergizmo, Google Blogoscoped, Global by Design, Between the Lines, The Register, ProBlogger Blog Tips, AppScout, ChannelWeb, TechSpot, RyanSpoon.com, Gizmodo, paidContent, CNET News, Google Operating System, The Next Web Network, Search Engine Journal, Digital Inspiration, VentureBeat, Gadgetell, Maximum PC, Andy Beal's Marketing Pilgrim, Search Engine Land, Download Squad, Silicon Alley Insider and Domain Name News
New York Times:
Author Grants Exclusive E-Book Rights to Amazon — Ever since electronic books emerged as a major growth market, New York's largest publishing houses have worried that big-name authors might sign deals directly with e-book retailers or other new ventures, bypassing traditional publishers entirely.
Discussion:
PC World, blogs.telegraph.co.uk, TeleRead, The eBook Test, Kindle Review, SlashGear, Media Decoder and GigaLaw.com Daily News
Gregg Keizer / Computerworld:
Chrome Mac, Linux betas push browser into No. 3 spot — Passes Safari, may beat Firefox at its own game on Linux — Computerworld - The release last week of betas of Chrome for Mac OS X and Linux pushed the Google browser's share past Apple's Safari and into the No. 3 spot, a Web measurement company said today.
MG Siegler / TechCrunch:
The Wall Opens A Bit More: Facebook To Publish User Updates To Twitter This Week — A lot has been said recently about Facebook's decision to re-write its privacy rulebook to encourage users to be more open about what they share. Privacy implications aside, at least it appears that Facebook is eating its own dogfood.
Discussion:
Inside Facebook
Stacey Higginbotham / GigaOM:
Is Bandwidth.com the Future of VoIP and Voice? — Bandwidth.com, despite having a name only a late '90s investor could love, has built a profitable all-IP network and expects to bring in $85 million in sales this year. Today it also is announcing that it's opening up its network as a platform …
Jesse Engle / CoTweet:
A Word About Twitter Commercial Accounts — Many people have asked us about Twitter's planned commercial account offering and what it means for CoTweet. Twitter has been planning for commercial accounts for a long time. Today Anamitra Banerji from Twitter's Product Team posted to their blog …
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Jim Dalrymple / The Loop:
Apple, Adobe, Microsoft, others sued for patent infringement — BetaNet on Monday filed a lawsuit against 18 companies, including Apple, Adobe and Microsoft. — Filed in the Eastern District of Texas, Marshall Division, the lawsuit claims the companies violate the '134 patent, entitled …
Esteban Kozak / The LinkedIn Blog:
Find people faster with LinkedIn's new faceted search — Here at LinkedIn, we believe that people search is one of the most valuable new areas of search technology. Late last year, we announced the launch of the new people search platform, rebuilt from the ground up.
RELATED:
Stan Schroeder / Mashable!:
Facebook Could Learn a Thing or Two From LinkedIn's Faceted Search
Facebook Could Learn a Thing or Two From LinkedIn's Faceted Search
Thanks:mariosundar
Thomas Ricker / Engadget:
Toshiba announces 64GB NAND packages: Apple winks, gives a nudge — Outside of the occasional leaked roadmap, one of the best ways to predict the future of consumer electronics is by looking at the evolution of the components within. Take this Toshiba NAND package for instance.
Discussion:
MacRumors, 9 to 5 Mac, The iPhone Blog, Toshiba, AppleInsider, iLounge, CrunchGear, Gadget Lab, EverythingiCafe, DailyTech, iPhone Buzz, IntoMobile, Softpedia News, SlashGear, Edible Apple, O'Grady's PowerPage and TUAW
Erick Schonfeld / TechCrunch:
Ebooks For Dummies: Wiley Joins 150 Publishers In The Scribd Store — Book publishers are increasingly embracing digital books, and not just on Amazon's Kindle. Today, John Wiley and Sons, Barnes and Noble imprint Sterling Publishing, Chronicle Books, and the University of Chicago Press announced …
Dan Goodin / The Register:
Google's reCAPTCHA busted by new attack — Significant success rate — A security researcher has devised a successful attack on a Google-owned system for blocking malicious scripts on web-based email services and other types of sites. — The attack, described in a paper released Saturday …
Discussion:
FierceCIO News
HardMac.com:
Details concerning the Xeon processors with 6 cores — New information shown by Intel lets us learn some more on the future Intel processors in 6 cores engraved in 32 nm that we soon expect to see equipping the Mac Pro. To start, contrary to the forecasts, these processors will keep the name of Core i7 and will not be called Core i9.
Colin Gibbs / GigaOM:
Verizon's Affair With Wi-Fi Heats Up — Verizon Wireless's love affair with Wi-Fi heated up again today with the carrier's announcement that its broadband subscribers can now connect to thousands of hotspots in North America at no additional charge. Subscribers with Verizon laptop cards …
Joseph Tartakoff / paidContent:
AlikeList Raises $5 Million For Local Business Reviews Site — A new local business reviews site has raised $5 million in a funding round from Syncom Venture Partners. The startup, AlikeList, is trying to distinguish itself from existing competitors by making its recommendations more personal.
Jason Kincaid / TechCrunch:
Facebook For Android Just Got A Big Upgrade, Is Catching Up To Its iPhone Cousin — For quite a while now now, one of the biggest problems with Android has been its app support. In particular, the Facebook application has been quite limited: you could read your News Feed …
Liam Cassidy / TheAppleBlog:
The Nexus One: A Non-Story — Over the weekend the rumors of a Google Phone were confirmed in the guise of the whimsically named Nexus One. It's an unbranded HTC-made carrier-unlocked handset running Android 2.0, and it looks lovely. And already articles have popped-up examining its various …
Peter Kafka / MediaMemo:
Comcast Launches Its “TV Everywhere” Plan Nationwide, with An Awful Name: Say Hello to “Xfinity” — As promised, Comcast (CMCSA) is opening up the trial of its “TV Everywhere” program, which gives its subscribers — but only its subscribers — access to extra TV programming on the Web.
AndroidGuys:
Developers Waste Little Time Porting Android 2.1 to Droid — In a move that comes as little surprise, some crafty developers have managed to extract Android 2.1 from a Nexus One handset to port it to the Motorola Droid. Does it work? Yes and no. According to comments left by the devs, it's buggy at best.
Discussion:
Android Phone Fans, Sholes, Redmond Pie, SlashGear, These are the Droids, PMP Today, Engadget, MobileCrunch and Techland
David Diaz / TechCrunch:
DEMO Winner Liaise Opens Doors, Debuts Mobile And Team Services — The winner of DEMO's enterprise category and people's choice award, Liaise, is moving from private to open beta by launching their much anticipated mobile calendar integration and introducing their Team Services platform.
Randolph J. May / Washington Times:
Voiding the Constitution — FCC rules could counter freedom of speech — The Federal Communications Commission has proposed new regulations to force broadband Internet service providers (ISPs) like Time Warner and Verizon to adhere to “net neutrality” mandates.
Google Code Blog:
Google Fusion Tables API — Today I'm excited to announce that Google Fusion Tables is releasing its own API. — What is Fusion Tables? A product launched recently in Google Labs, Fusion Tables is a free service for sharing and visualizing data online.
Eric Lai / Computerworld:
The Grill: Microsoft's Chris Capossela on Google, Twitter and that Blue Screen of Death — Microsoft Office marketing chief talks about plans to beat Google Apps, adding Twitter-like features to Office, and the now-infamous BSOD … You've only worked at two places in your life: Microsoft and your dad's restaurant.
Brooks Barnes / New York Times:
Paramount to Start Online Service to Sell Movie Clips — LOS ANGELES — Paramount Pictures, looking for new ways to turn its old movies into cash, especially as DVD sales continue to decline, is creating an online video clip service that will allow users to search hundreds of feature films on a frame-by-frame basis.
Brian Garner / AppleInsider:
Apple named ‘Brand of the Decade’ by Adweek — Apple received top honors in six categories in Adweek's “Best of the 2000s” advertising awards, including “Brand of the Decade” and “Marketer of the Decade” for Steve Jobs. — Naming Apple the “Brand of the Decade,” AdweekMedia attributes …
Discussion:
Macworld, Silicon Alley Insider, Digital Daily, Softpedia News, Appletell, DisplayBlog, The Loop and TUAW
Ars Technica:
iPhone and Snow Leopard Server's failure to communicate — Imagine if the iPod worked with a Windows machine but not on a Mac. Would make zero sense, right? Amazingly, this scenario describes the current reality with the iPhone and Apple's server edition of its Mac OS X operating system.
Discussion:
The iPhone Blog
Ina Fried / CNET News:
Microsoft's server chief talks cloud (Q&A) — It's been a busy year for Bob Muglia. — Microsoft's server and tools boss shipped an update to Windows Server, got promoted to division president, and prepared Microsoft's operating system in the clouds—Windows Azure—for its commercial launch.